- Jim Harmon
James Judson Harmon, aka Jim Harmon (born 1933), is an American short story author and popular culture historian who has written extensively about the Golden Age of Radio. He sometimes wrote under the pseudonym Judson Grey, and occasionally he was labeled Mr. Nostalgia.
Fiction
During the 1950s and 1960s, Harmon wrote more than 50 short stories and novelettes for "
Amazing Stories ", "Future Science Fiction", "Galaxy Science Fiction ", "If", "The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction ", "Venture Science Fiction Magazine " and other magazines. These were collected in such science fiction anthologies as "Fourth Galaxy Reader", "Galaxy: Thirty Years of Speculative Fiction" and "Rare Science Fiction".The best of Harmon's science fiction stories were recently reprinted in "Harmon's Galaxy" (Cosmos Books, 2004) with an introduction by
Richard A. Lupoff . The collection includes one from the December 1962 issue of "The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction" ("The Depths") and five from "Galaxy" -- "Charity Case" (December 1959), "Name Your Symptom" (May 1956), "No Substitutions" (November 1958), "The Place Where Chicago Was" (February 1962) and "The Spicy Sound of Success" (August 1959).His only science fiction novel, "The Contested Earth" (1959), was given its first publication last year along with seven short stories in "The Contested Earth and Other SF Stories" (Ramble House, 2007) includes a new novel along with seven of his previously published short stories. In the introduction, Harmon reflected on the novel's history::This is a period peace, written during the last years of the pulp era. I was 26 in 1959, and some science fiction magazines were still in the old familiar pulp magazine style of about seven by nine inches, such as "
Science Fiction Quarterly "... Due to a health problem, I had little formal education. But I read a lot and thought a lot and imagined a lot. I became a science fiction writer. "The Contested Earth" was my first science fiction novel. I had written a number of novelettes and short stories and sold a good number to the aforementioned "SF Quarterly" and more to one of the leading SF magazines, "Galaxy". The editor there,H. L. Gold , was incredibly supportive of a teen-age writer. In one editorial, he referred to me as a “Vesuvius of flaming, literary lava”. What more can be said after that! Yet he did not accept this novel. One reason (but only one) was that in those days novels were accepted almost exclusively by the leaders in the field like Robert Heinlein, Isaac Asimov and Theodore Sturgeon, by both magazines and paperback and hardcover publishers. After a number of submissions back then, I stopped submitting this novel. As the years passed and the number of manuscript I kept got down to a single Stor-All box, I would go through these yellowing bundles of pages and throw some away—ones I had published and ones I thought I would never publish. Somehow, I decided to keep this novel “a little while longer.” Finally, I encountered Fender Tucker and his wonderful endeavor, Ramble House, and got a go-ahead to put out "The Contested Earth". I made changes in it but mostly in writing style. [ [http://www.ramblehouse.com/contestedearthchapter.htm Harmon, Jim. "Introduction," Ramble House] ]Harmon also wrote Western tales for such magazines as "Double-Action Western", plus detective and crime stories ("Smashing Detective", "Pursuit"). Eight of his mystery novels have been slightly revised by Harmon and reprinted by Ramble House in trade editions,
Radio
When Harmon began writing about the classic radio shows, almost no books on the subject had been published, so he had the field to himself. He got underway with "The Great Radio Heroes" (1967), reprinted by McFarland & Company in 2002. "Library Journal" reviewed::Radio producer Harmon here expands his 1967 original to include numerous photos of actors who starred in the radio shows of yesteryear and to update their profiles (what they are doing now, who died, etc.). Chapters cover the stars of cop shows, Westerns, comedies, adventures, and dramas. A good one-stop resource for information on the days when radio was the leading form of home entertainment.
Harmon's other books include "The Great Radio Comedians" (Doubleday, 1970), "Jim Harmon's Nostalgia Catalogue" (J.P. Tarcher, 1973), "The Great Movie Serials" (Routledge, 1973), "The Godzilla Book" (Borgo, 1986), "Radio & TV Premiums: A Guide to the History and Value of Radio and TV Premiums" (Krause, 1997), "Radio Mystery and Adventure and Its Appearances in Film, Television and Other Media" (McFarland, 2003).
Radio into fiction
He edited volumes two and three of "It's That Time Again" (Bearmanor Media, 2004 and 2006), an anthology series of new fiction featuring the characters of
old-time radio . His story in the first volume is "Tom Mix and the Mystery of the Bodiless Horseman." For the second book in the series, he contributed "Sherlock Holmes and the Adventure of the Duplicate Daughter" and "The Avenger and the Maker of Werewolves." The third volume in the series introduced character crossovers, and Harmon combined Nick Carter, Jack Armstrong and Tom Mix into a single novelette, "Jack Armstrong and the Horde of Montezuma".One of the earliest dealers to issue a catalog of tapes of old time radio shows, Harmon also wrote, produced and appeared in a radio revival of the "Tom Mix" radio series during the early 1980s. He was the Guest of Honor at the Multicon 70 science-fiction convention, held in
Oklahoma City in June 1970, and a 1977 recipient of theInkpot Award , given annually at the San Diego Comic-Con.References
External links
* [http://www.angelfire.com/on/ilam/Harmon.htm Interview with Jim Harmon (March 11-12, 2000)]
* [http://enter.net/~torve/critics/PITFCS/137harmon.html Jim Harmon on Robert A. Heinlein, from "The Proceedings of the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies" 137(October 1960)]
* [http://manybooks.net/authors/harmonj.html Out-of-copyright works by Harmon at manybooks.net]
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