The bulk of the song was written by
John Phillips and concerns his daughter
Mackenzie Phillips' honeymoon experiences. She and her new husband, both serious substance abusers, flew to
Guam and when the money and drugs ran out, she made a late-night phone call to her father begging him to send money or drugs, preferably both; when he asked where she was, the reply was "somewhere near Japan". Phillips' original version of the song, titled "Fairy Tale Girl," allegedly ran to over 25 verses. A late-1980s recording by
the New Mamas & the Papas (John Phillips, Mackenzie Phillips,
Scott McKenzie, and
Spanky McFarlane) under the title "Fairy Tale Girl (Somewhere Near Japan)" was belatedly released on the 2010 compilation
Many Mamas, Many Papas from
Varèse Sarabande. The final Beach Boys release describes a protagonist agreeing to come to the rescue of his "fairy tale girl" who is "driftin on some Chinese junk," a double entendre for both
heroin and
a type of ship, despite the likelihood that she will "break [his] heart one more time"—concluding that "I broke her fall and I always will." ==Recording==