The
Complete Yes Minister
Publishers Weekly
April 17, 1987
The British TV series Yes Minister (shown here on PBS) began
as an innocuous spoof on the vagaries of politicians and civil servants.
Its popularity increased as it developed a deepening satiric perception
of how the British are actually governed: Ministers are kept in
the dark by their civil service advisers as much as possible; their
sole domain is "making policy," while the civil servants
get on with running the country and making sure the politicians
get the blame. In turning their scripts into a book, the authors
have gone beyond a simple recounting of the episodes. Presented
as actual memoirs - the diary of James Hacker, Minister for the
Department of Administrative Affairs, augmented by material from
his two civil service advisers, sir Humphrey Appleby and Bernard
Wooley - Yes Minister is an amusingly literate, sharply satirical
account of the exchanges of quid pro quo necessary to run any government.
The book surpasses its TV origins and stands firmly on it's own
merits. On the bestseller lists in England for over three years,
this provocative satire could well be considered a British Doonesbury.
25,000 fist printing (May 25)
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