Box 13 1948 Xx Xx (023) Three To Die
# Box 13: Three To Die
When Dan Holliday opens Box 13 on this fateful evening, he discovers something far more sinister than his usual cache of mysterious correspondence—a cryptic message that sets three innocent lives on a collision course with death. As our intrepid columnist races against the clock through shadowed city streets and dimly-lit back rooms, the tension mounts with each passing moment. Who sent the warning? Which three souls hang in the balance? With only fragments of clues and his wits as weapons, Holliday must untangle a web of deception and desperation before midnight strikes and fate claims its victims. This is a masterclass in radio suspense, where the crackle of static between scenes only amplifies the dread, and the superb sound design—footsteps echoing through empty warehouses, the mechanical ring of telephones, the distant wail of sirens—pulls listeners into the very heart of danger.
*Box 13* stands as a remarkable achievement in the post-war golden age of radio drama, featuring the magnetic Dan Holliday (played with perfect everyman charm by Alan Ladd in the film adaptation) solving mysteries spawned entirely from the anonymous notes delivered to his newspaper column. Created during an era when Americans huddled around their radios for nightly escape, the show embodied the noir sensibility that captivated post-WWII audiences: gritty, fast-paced, and morally complex. This 1948 episode exemplifies why the series achieved such syndicated success, balancing genuine peril with clever plotting that kept listeners guessing until the final revelation.
Don't miss "Three To Die"—a gripping reminder of when radio could chill the spine and quicken the pulse with nothing but voices, sound, and imagination. Tune in and discover why audiences across America made *Box 13* an unmissable appointment with mystery.