Sunday, March 15, 2026

Jimmy Webb - American Songwriter With Many Connections To Genre Fiction

 


Jimmy Webb is a songwriter, composer, and singer with a long and storied history within the music business. The son of a US Marine veteran of the WWII island hopping campaign against Imperial Japan and Baptist preacher, Jimmy began his career working by crafting songs for various Motown artists. 

His work was performed by a wide range of artists including Vikki Carr, The 5th Dimension, and The Supremes. He developed a close relationship with singer Glen Campbell whose performances of "Galveston", "By The Time I Get To Phoenix", and "Wichita Lineman" became standards in the American songbook. 

Glen Campbell also popularized the Jimmy Webb song "Highwayman" which includes an interstellar reference:
I fly a starship 
Across the Universe divide
And when I reach the other side
I'll find a place to rest my spirit if I can
Jimmy's relationship with genre figures includes the late Richard Harris who was the first incarnation of Dumbledore in the Harry Potter movies. It was Richard Harris' recording of "MacArthur Park" that first popularized that song. Harris was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1968 for the best pop male vocal performance of "MacArthur Park". [Also nominated were Glen Campbell for another Jimmy Webb song "Wichita Lineman" and the ultimate winner in the category José Feliciano who covered The Doors' "Light My Fire".] 

Harris' version of MacArthur Park went to number 2 on the Hot 100 chart. Webb's only number one hit in his career was when Donna Summer's version went to the top of the chart. 

Jimmy Webb proceeded to write and produce two full albums of music performed by Richard Harris. The first album released in 1968 was the Grammy nominated A Tramp Shining album. The second album "The Yard Went On Forever" was released later the same year. 

As evidenced by the starship reference in "Highwayman", Jimmy has had a long relationship with genre fiction. 

A long-time fan of Robert A. Heinlein, Webb proceeded to write "The Moon Is A Hard Mistress". Robert Heinlein offered no opposition to using that name for the song. 

The song is more of a love song than a paean to science fiction with the moon representing a woman who is hard to hold in love.
"The moon's a harsh mistress
And the sky is made of stone
The moon's a harsh mistress
She's hard to call your own"
The song was first performed by Joe Cocker and has been subsequently recorded 30 times by artists including Glen Campbell (natch!), Pat Metheny, Linda Ronstadt, Joan Baez, and Maureen McGovern. 

Jimmy Webb talked about his relationship with genre fiction and Robert A. Heinlein specifically in a 2009 interview for Penny Black Music by Lisa Torem.
Penny Black Music: Another beautiful ballad ‘The Moon is a Harsh Mistress’ (1977, 'El Mirage’, Rhino Handmade) was inspired by science- fiction literature. Does literature often inspire you?
Jimmy Webb: Well, it always has. In that particular case, you know, Robert Heinlein, was a kind of early mentor of mine. I started reading his books when I was eight years old. He really wrote juvenile novels – ‘Starship Trooper.’ But, he had a lot of political content and sociological content. I guess I was really getting more of my education out of science-fiction than out of public school. I was reading Ray Bradbury and Isaac Asimov and learning a great deal about the patois of the language itself and how these words were being used to create emotions. I was learning this from writers without even knowing it.

And since science-fiction is my cup of tea and I don’t think I turned out to be wrong – I think it’s dominated the film industry over the past few years and it turned out to be a legitimate form of expression.

When I first started reading sci-fi they were debating whether it as a legitimate art-form. I’m not going to get into that…

This isn’t really art – these are just stories that people make up. People like Arthur C. Clarke invented the communications satellite and Jules Verne – as a visionary – what they were was futurists. And so what I was doing was looking with a glazed look on my face and my father would say, “Where are you now, Jimmy?”

But, I guess I always knew that. ‘The Moon is a Harsh Mistress’ was one of the best titles I’ve ever heard in my life. I really am guilty of appropriating something from another writer. In this case I had contact with Robert A. Heinlein’s attornies. I said, “I want to write a song with the title, ‘The Moon is a Harsh Mistress.’ Can you ask Mr. Heinlein if it’s okay with him?” They called me back and he said he had no objection to it.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

I Didn't Just Lose You

 
Found on the Book of Faces under The Pooh Lover.

Maybe I'm saving this because my friend Gary just lost his wife.  The one he spent a lifetime waiting for.  The one he will spend a lifetime missing.

Maybe I'm saving this because I fear experiencing his fate.  Losing my beloved bride wouldn't just be losing a partner.  It would mean losing in integral piece of what make me who I am.

Maybe I'm saving this for day when memory truly fades and I'm looking around for someone familiar in a sea of faces all claim to be friends or family and in whose faces I experience only vague recollection.

Maybe I'm saving this for you, my unknown reader, so you will know that it is OK to miss someone with all your heart.  Your world has changed.  And it will change again.  And so will you.  And while there will be someone missing in your life, you will still be here.  You too will be missed in turn.  So stay with us.  Be the place that feels "like home" for someone else for as long as you can.  And then a minute more.

Thursday, January 1, 2026

SPFBO Champions League

Now that SPFBO has completed 10 competitions, Mark Lawrence has started a "Champions League" where each of those winners will be ranked against one another.  The competition has concluded with the winners announced on Facebook and on Mark's blog.

I've read most of the winners, but not all.  With that in mind, here is how I would rank these champions.

I've segmented this into tiers as there are some books that far outshine the others.  And other books that...welllllll.  You get the point.  Links to my reviews are included where available.  Included in the comments is where the book ended up in the competition.

First Tier - Must Read
BookAuthorDann's RatingBrief Comments




J. Zachary Pike5 StarsSolid mix of humor, old-school, hack-and-slash AD&D, economics, and the financial crash of 2008.

Our hero is an adventurer in the old school D&D sense.  He assembles a team to go acquire treasure.  Along the way, he learns how his expedition gets monetized and how the adventuring system creates victims unjustly.
[Came in second in the competition.  Great book, great series.]


Jonathan French5 Stars A bunch of half-orcs are charged with defending civilization (read humans) from predation by full orcs.  This is a surface level "guys" book that includes an important subtext about questioning the accepted narrative.  A "must read" for any fantasy fan.
[Came in 8th in the competition.  I'm not sure why.  I may have to read the judges reviews.]


Morgan Stang4 StarsI should not like this book.  It combines a Cthulu-esque mythos, with a Sherlock Holmesian protagonist, with a steam punk vibe.

But I love this book.  Our hero and her sidekick are engaging and entertaining.  The mystery takes time to resolve and kept me guessing.  Lots of dry British humo(u)r. Well worth the time to read.
[Came in 7th in the competition.  Again, I'm baffled, but to each their own dentifrice.]



M.L. Wang5 StarsThe book is a tour-de-force of Asian inspired fantasy storytelling.  Our protagonist isn't supposed to be good with a sword.  Turns out she is great with a sword.

Lots of culture/norms busting subtext included with a main story and characters that are engaging and thought provoking.
[Came in 1st in the competition.  This is a worthy victor and well worth your time.]

Second Tier - Good Books, Solidly Entertaining


Olivia Atwater4 Stars[I haven't formally reviewed the book.]  This is one of those "cozy" novels that have become popular lately.  Great characters.  The storyline is mostly OK and would be great were it not for the unforeseen resolution that smacks mightily of Deus ex machina, literally.

It turns out that angels and demons really do live among us.  And sometimes they do miracles.  
[Came in 4th in the competition.  It's a good book.  If you like "cozy" coupled with "don't think too much about it", then this is a great read.]

Justin Lee Anderson4 StarsI'd almost put this book above "Small Miracles".  It was a well told story with engaging characters.  At the end of the book, there is a big reveal that causes you to reconsider all of the other actions in the book.  A real mind-bender.
[Came in 5th in the competition and 6th on my list, so pretty close!!]

J.L. Odom4 StarsWhile I enjoyed this book and wish the author, a fellow Marine, great success, it just left something out.  Mostly this is the first book of a series and it largely sets up the later books without really resolving any issues in the first book.
[Came in 3rd in the competition.  There was a lot of great writing and worldbuilding in the book.  But it isn't a complete story.  And the fantasy elements were minimal.]

Have Never Read - I'm working on it.


Michael McClung--I haven't read this, but I've heard lots of good things about it.
[Came in 6th in the competition.]

Rob J. Hayes--I haven't read this one either.  But the author is well known in the self-publishing and Grimdark communities.

I'm reading this book right now.  Not the best first few chapters.  I thought this was going to be a DNF for a while.  It's picking up.  Unless it sticks the landing, it will end up in the Second Tier, above.
[Came in 9th in the competition.]

Last Tier


J.D. Evans2 Stars
[2.5 Stars]
This is a romance novel smeared with a layer of fantasy-ium.  Our protagonists smash for no good reason.  The magic and political intrigue is stated but never really shown.  There are the bones of a good story here that are occluded by "romantasy".
[Came in 10th.  I agree!!]