Quiet Please 480510 049 There Are Shadows Here
# There Are Shadows Here
Step into the suffocating darkness of a condemned house where the past refuses to stay buried. In this haunting episode of *Quiet Please*, a skeptical visitor ventures into a structure marked for demolition, only to discover that some presences cannot be so easily erased. What begins as rational curiosity curdles into creeping dread as shadows move where no light exists, and the air grows thick with whispered warnings. Hosted by the program's signature narrator, whose measured tones only amplify the terror, this tale weaves psychological horror with genuine supernatural menace—you'll never be quite sure which is claiming dominion over the listener's sanity. The sound design is masterful, each creak and silence more unsettling than any scream, drawing you deeper into a nightmare logic where the living may be far less substantial than the dead.
*Quiet Please* occupied a unique niche in late-1940s radio, arriving after the golden age of adventure serials had begun to wane. Created by Wyllis Cooper, the master of suspense who'd previously shaped *Lights Out*, the program distinguished itself through psychological sophistication and cinematic restraint. Rather than relying on melodrama or monsters, these fifteen-minute episodes trusted listeners' imaginations—the most terrifying weapon available. "There Are Shadows Here" exemplifies this approach, building its horror through implication and atmosphere rather than explanation, reflecting an audience grown tired of simple scares and hungry for stories that would linger long after the final commercial.
This is radio drama at its finest: intimate, intelligent, and utterly chilling. Tune in and discover why listeners huddled near their sets each week, lights on, doors locked, waiting for *Quiet Please* to prove once again that the darkest horrors are those we cannot quite see.