Quiet Please 480524 051 In The House Where I Was Born
# Quiet Please: In the House Where I Was Born
On a fog-laden evening in 1948, listeners tuned their dials to *Quiet Please* and found themselves drawn inexorably back through time—into the creaking corridors of a childhood home where memories harbor darker secrets than nostalgia would suggest. "In the House Where I Was Born" wraps its sinister narrative around a deceptively simple premise: a man returns to his ancestral mansion, hoping to reconnect with innocence lost. What he discovers instead is that some houses don't merely shelter the living—they preserve the dead, their whispers seeping from the very walls. With Sterling's masterful sound design transforming every groan of floorboards and distant footstep into an instrument of dread, this episode exemplifies the show's uncanny ability to transform the familiar into the frightening. The intimate setting of home becomes a maze of psychological terror, where the line between memory and haunting blurs into something unspeakably wrong.
*Quiet Please* emerged during radio's golden twilight, when audiences had grown sophisticated in their appetite for psychological horror. Hosted and largely written by Ernest Hemingway's friend Wyllis Cooper, the series eschewed monsters and gore for something far more unsettling: the creeping realization that danger lives in shadow and suggestion. This particular episode represents the show's peak, crafted when Cooper had perfected the art of making silence itself terrifying—those pregnant pauses between scenes where listeners' imaginations did the real heavy lifting, conjuring horrors more potent than any sound effect could manage.
If you've never experienced *Quiet Please*, this episode is an ideal entry point into one of radio's most masterfully crafted programs. Dim the lights, steady your nerves, and prepare to return home—to a place that remembers you far better than you remember it.