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Lower Price Hill mural
Lower Price Hill mural | Show Photo

Price Hill / Covedale

Corner bloc
Corner bloc
Once Cincinnati's most popular suburb, Price Hill/Covedale borders the west end of the city of Cincinnati. Locals love long-standing family-owned business like Greek restaurant, Sebastians, and the infamous Price Hill Chili. Once home to Pete Rose and the headquarters of Slush Puppies, Price Hill still houses a major food manufacturing plant for hometown based Kroger. Mt. Echo Park offers sweeping views of the Cincinnati skyline and Cincinnati Christian University resides along Glenway Avenue, attracting young students from all over the world to this unique and historical area of town.

Price Hill / Covedale Features

Drawn together

Independent comic book store owners in Greater Cincinnati are in the business of sharing their passion with the masses. In the age of e-readers and iPads, they satisfy die-hard fans and cultivate new ones by nurturing a sense of community.

Comics conversations

Read It. Jeff Suess and his graphic novel discussion group meet at 1 p.m. on Saturday, August 13, at the Mercantile Library. They'll be discussing Anya's Ghost by Vera Brosgol. There are copies available at the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County. [414 Walnut Street, 11th floor, downtown, 513-621-0717] Buy It. The 2011 Cincinnati Comic Expo takes place on Saturday, September 17, at the Duke Energy Center. Nearly 30 vendors will be on hand, selling everything from comics to figurines. [525 Elm Street, downtown] Try It. The first Saturday in May is Free Comic Book Day, in which stores give away comics and other goodies to entice would-be customers. "Rockin' Rooster has a ton of graphic novels and a variety of new titles," Suess says. "Up Up & Away has great back issues. Queen City and Mavericks run the gamut in titles. Arcadian has a nice selection of independent titles. And Comic Book World in Florence has been around a long time and has a big selection. And the people who work at all these shops really know their comics." Go online to find out which local shops participate.

Bees in the hood: urban beekeeping in the Queen City

A sense of wonder and a buzz of energy infuse conversations with Cincinnati beekeepers. For them, keeping bees is about living in harmony with nature and reinventing a tradition with many of the time-honored tools that have kept the world supplied with honey, and kept crops pollinated, for hundreds of years.
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