This book contains the basic content of the play, but does not give all staging information, musical score etc. (this should be obtained from Samuel French Inc.). Also, I know that it has at least one misprint, where it fails to include a verse of the one of the songs (I know this because I own a copy of the original cast recording which can still be found used for a reasonable price). There have been various editions of this book and possibly different printing correct this error or introduce other problems. In any case the book does include some black and white photographs of the original Broadway production, the play is rarely performed and so this is one of the few ways to find out what happened in this play, something of relevance to those wishing to achieve the complete Doonesbury experience.
The play is a fun, often funny and occasionally poignant look at this familiar cast of characters as most of them cast off 13 years as a perennial college students. The main Doonesbury cast (including the eponymous Mike Doonesbury, Mark Slackmeyer, Zonker Harris, B.D. and Boopsie) are preparing for graduation and are anxious or hopeful about their future. Joanie Caucus has returned with her newborn son in toe to see her old friends off. Joanie's adult daughter JJ is feuding with her mother and being wooed by the unsure of himself Mike. Adding menace to these proceedings Duke and his assistant Honey Huan are planning to convert the cast's home (the Walden commune) into condos. All this is covered by intrepid talking head Roland Hedley. The characters plots are all resolved more or less and this sets the stage for the characters return to comic strip form (although there are a few slips between the portrayal of events in the comics and at the end of the play). Although some scenes and bits are much like the comic strip (a Washington press conference is parodied at the start), the play does tell the stories of these characters, with the musical numbers accentuating the action. The number of characters means that each character is rapped up quickly and this can often make the stories feel a bit shallow, but nothing feels out of character or otherwise obviously clunky about the script.