Jean Shepherd was a well-known American humorist who performed on
radio in the decades after World War II. Beginning in June 1964, he began adapting many of his radio stories for publication in
Playboy magazine. He focused primarily on those which depicted his childhood in the fictional town of Hohman,
Indiana (a stand-in for Shepherd's home town of
Hammond, Indiana). According to
Playboy founder
Hugh Hefner, author
Shel Silverstein had long encouraged Shepherd to write down his radio stories, but Shepherd was reluctant to do so because he was not a writer. Eventually, Silverstein recorded Shepherd's stories on
tape,
transcribed them, and then together with Shepherd edited and developed the most popular. Shepherd claimed it took him three years to complete
In God We Trust: All Others Pay Cash. Some of its stories were the first of Shepherd's work to appear in
Playboy. a view seconded by scholars Penelope Joan Fritzer and Bartholomew Bland. However, drawn as they were from his radio storytelling, Shepherd wove elements of real life into his tales (such as names of some of the characters being found in his high school yearbook, having a younger brother Randy, and Hammond being home to a Warren G. Harding Elementary School, a Cleveland Street, and a Hohlman Avenue)) and certainly took artistic license in exaggerating any real-life events that may have served as seeds for his yarns. As Mark Skertic put it for the
Chicago Sun-Times: [the city of] "Hohman doesn't really exist, but the sights, sounds and events Mr. Shepherd described happening there grew out of his experiences growing up in and around real-life Hammond, Ind." ==Title==