Describes the one hundred year history of Cleveland's West Side Market, covering the building, people, food, and how it has changed over time.
A History of Cleveland's West Side Market
But Ken Lam, the owner of that place, convinced his brother Hoa, the owner of this place, to add many of those dishes to the offerings here. The atmosphere is warm and hospitable, and there's a steady flow of patrons at all hours, ...
1911 W. 30th St., 216/651-6313, www.ignatius.edu With 13 majestic buildings spread across a lush 16-acre campus, ... Cleveland neighborhoods are graced with scores of architecturally stunning churches, their steeples and bell towers ...
Contains seventy-two brief accounts of life on the near west side of Cleveland, Ohio, in the early twentieth century.
A cookbook for the ultimate pantry staple, suddenly a major food trend—tinned fish. In 75 inventive recipes, readers will learn how rewarding, economical, and versatile cooking with tinned fish can be.
The culmination of the personal project is this collection of over two hundred of his creations that reveal the spirit and essence of the Lake View Cemetery.
Treating architecture as a social phenomenon as well as a fine art, this volume is the standard architectural history of Cleveland.
Lost Cleveland is the latest in the series from Pavilion Books that traces the cherished places in a city that time, progress and fashion swept aside before the National Register of Historic Places could save them from the wrecker's ball.
Former Irish mafia hitman Brock Sheehan lives quietly on a boat fifty miles from Cleveland.
Slavic Village began as part of the Connecticut Western Reserve, a parcel of land surveyed and populated with East Coast residents seeking adventure and fortune in the 19th century.