Suspense 600306 843 Sleep Is For Children (128 44) 23396 24m37s
# Sleep Is For Children
Picture this: a darkened living room, the glow of a radio dial cutting through the shadows as a child's fevered imagination runs wild in the dead of night. In "Sleep Is For Children," *Suspense* weaves a harrowing tale of a youngster who refuses to surrender to slumber, convinced that something sinister awaits in the darkness—and perhaps, terrifyingly, that conviction may not be mere childhood fancy. As orchestral strings writhe and creak with unsettling purpose, listeners are pulled into a nightmare world where the line between a child's fears and genuine horror dissolves entirely. The twenty-four minute runtime winds tighter and tighter, building toward a climax that will leave you questioning whether the real terror lurked in the shadows all along, or in the very act of staying awake to face them.
*Suspense* was the gold standard of American thriller radio, and this 1940s episode exemplifies why the show dominated CBS airwaves for two decades. With a rotating cast of stellar actors and scripts that understood the power of suggestion—where the audience's imagination becomes the most effective special effect—each episode delivered pure psychological dread. "Sleep Is For Children" taps into primal fears that transcend its era: parental anxiety, childhood vulnerability, and the terrifying notion that our worst imaginings might actually be real. The show's genius lay in trusting listeners to conjure their own demons, making *Suspense* far more potent than any visual medium could achieve.
Tune in tonight and rediscover why millions huddled around their radios in the 1940s, doors locked and lights on, unable to sleep themselves. "Sleep Is For Children" awaits—but be warned: after this broadcast, you may find yourself understanding the protagonist's desperate struggle all too well.