About time a spokeshave Master jumps in.
But I will speak up instead.
I happen to love spokeshaves. I have gone thru several Stanley's. I learned how to tune them up and use them properly. Unfortunately I didn't learn to not drop them on concrete floors. The cast iron bodies can be a little delicate.
Eventually I graduated to a Veritas spoke shave from Lee Valley Tools. Yeah, it's 4x more expensive than the Stanleys, but the tool bed is machined to tolerences varying less than a 0.001 so that when the blade is installed and tightened, it beds flawlessly to the tool body. This seriouslycuts down on chattering. The blade I chose is the A2 carbon steel, and lemme tell you, it's seriously hard stuff to sharpen. But it cuts cured osage like it's styrofoam!
I like the fine adjustments I can make to the tool and how I can control how much material I remove at a pass. If you learn to read grain, a spokeshave works just fine, you just pick your battles.
The spokeshave is just another tool in the chest. It does not replace a scraper nor a rasp. Nor does the scraper or rasp replace the chisel and mallet. The chisel and mallet does not replace the saw. Plus, the Veritas spokeshave is just plain pretty to look at!