Suspense 611210 904 And So To Sleep My Love (64 44) 11896 24m00s
# And So To Sleep My Love
As the familiar *Suspense* theme swells through your radio speaker—that haunting, discordant wail of strings cutting through the darkness—you settle into an evening that promises to unsettle you long after the broadcast ends. "And So To Sleep My Love" draws listeners into an intimate nightmare where the boundary between devotion and obsession dissolves like poison in a nightcap. In this tale of twisted affection, a man's desperate love becomes something far more sinister, transforming the bedroom—that most private sanctuary—into a chamber of creeping dread. With masterful sound design and performances that capture the trembling uncertainty of the human voice, this episode exemplifies why millions of Americans kept their radio dials tuned to *Suspense* week after week, unable to resist the pull of stories that made them question those closest to them.
*Suspense* arrived on CBS in 1942 as wartime America sought escape and catharsis in darker entertainment. The show's innovative approach—rotating dramatic directors, Hollywood talent, and scripts drawn from literature and original teleplays—created an unpredictability that made each episode feel genuinely dangerous. "And So To Sleep My Love" represents the golden age of radio drama, when sound effects and voice acting replaced visual spectacle, forcing listeners' imaginations to do the heavy lifting. The show ran for twenty years, outlasting the war it was born into, proving that the psychology of fear transcends any single historical moment.
Whether you're a devotee of classic radio or discovering this lost world for the first time, "And So To Sleep My Love" offers a perfect entry point into a medium where stories lived and died by dialogue, silence, and the listener's willingness to believe. Tune in, dim the lights, and prepare yourself for an evening of genuine suspense—the kind that echoes in the quiet rooms of your mind long after the final fade to black.