The lissoclimides are unusual succinimide-containing labdane diterpenoids that were reported to be potent cytotoxins. Our short semi-synthesis and analogue-oriented synthesis approaches have provided a series of lissoclimide natural products and analogues that expanded the structure-activity relationships in this family. The semi-synthesis approach yielded significant quantities of chlorolissoclimide that permitted evaluation against the NCI’s 60 cell line panel and allowed us to obtain an X-ray co-crystal structure of the synthetic secondary metabolite with the eukaryotic 80S ribosome. While it shares a binding site with other imide-based natural product translation inhibitors, chlorolissoclimide engages in a particularly interesting and novel face-on halogen-π interaction between the ligand’s alkyl chloride and a guanine residue. Our analogue-oriented synthesis provided many more lissoclimide compounds, which were tested against aggressive human cancer cell lines, and for protein synthesis inhibitory activity. Finally, computational modeling was used to explain the SAR of certain key compounds, setting the stage for structure-guided design of better translation inhibitors.