‘A second car has hit Uncle Ike’s’ — Capitol Hill pot shop struck in second smash and grab burglary targeting same store in three days

Again! Thanks to a CHS reader for the picture and tip

A CHS reader reported an ominous incident Sunday morning — “A second car has hit Uncle Ike’s

Only days after the store was targeted in a nearly identical smash and grab burglary early Friday morning, a group of brazen thieves struck the 15th Ave E Uncle Ike’s for a second time early Sunday, smashing a stolen Hyundai Elantra into the same corner of the store damaged Friday and entering the shop to steal cannabis products and gear from inside the compromised building. Continue reading

The Capitol Hill Class of 2024: How neighborhood’s new food and drink joints fared in their first year

Inside Koko’s

By Domenic Strazzabosco

Last spring, a crop of new bars and restaurants opened across the corners of Capitol Hill. Two new food and drink joints joined Broadway, Chandelier Lounge and Guillotine, the contemporary Vietnamese cuisine of Ramie opened on 14th and a Seattle expansion of the Salvadorian-Mexican joint Koko’s found a home on 10th.

A year later, CHS talked with the new class to check in on how the first year has gone and how they’re planning on navigating going forward.

Koko’s Restaurant and Tequila Bar, located on 10th Ave, opened last spring, and the owners remain appreciative of the reception it’s received from the neighborhood.

“Honestly, it’s been amazing. The support from the community has been great,” said Gibran Moreno, who owns Koko’s with his partner Alexi Torres. “We just can’t believe how people are so happy for us to be on The Hill.” Continue reading

Kshama for Congress? — UPDATE

(Image: Workers Strike Back)

Smith

Former District 3 representative on the Seattle City Council Kshama Sawant and her Workers Strike Back group are scheduled to announce a new “election campaign for public office” Monday morning but the socialist political leader is not targeting a return to Seattle City Hall.

At Monday’s press conference outside downtown Seattle’s Henry M. Jackson Federal Building, Sawant is expected to announce her bid to unseat District 9’s Adam Smith. The moderate Democrat has held the office representing Seattle’s Central District, South Seattle, and an area stretching from Bellevue to Federal Way since he was first elected in 1996. Continue reading

This 2025 Pulitzer finalist wrote her novel in a Capitol Hill coworking space

Levine

If you visited the Cloud Room co-working space on weekends over the past few years, you might have spotted Stacey Levine, the writer and long-time Capitol Hill resident who this month learned she was one of four finalists for the 2025 Pulitzer Prize in Fiction for her novel Mice 1961.

“Every weekend, I would go there and work on this novel,” said Levine. “I wrote most of it over eight years at the Cloud Room. On the way, I’d pass all these people eating dinner out and having fun, and I was very grumpy because I had to keep working on the book.”

Those years of hard work paid off. In addition to the Pulitzer nod, The Washington Post favorably reviewed Mice 1961—describing Levine as a “gifted performance artist of literary fiction—part French existentialist and part comic bomb-thrower” and the novel as “a brilliant chemistry of alienation and familiarity I’ve never seen anywhere else”—and included it in their list of 50 Notable Works of Fiction in 2024.

A Cold War era novel set in South Florida on the eve of the Bay of Pigs invasion, Mice 1961 follows three unforgettable characters: the orphaned siblings Jody and her 18-year-old younger sister Ivy, nicknamed “Mice” and cruelly bullied by teenagers for her albinism, and their housekeeper, Girtle, who sleeps behind the sisters’ couch and narrates the novel. Jody, Mice, and Girtle are surrounded by odd neighbors, all preparing for an elaborate neighborhood potluck.

The novel is witty, with Levine’s prose evocative. She describes Mice as a “white-pink creature” with “milkscape” features—“peel-thin ears,” “jittering eyes,” and “cream-orange-tipped white lashes, much like two thin, tidy rows of camel hair.” Mice’s “bottomless absence of color” renders her “a shadow in reverse.”

Levine, who also teaches composition, creative writing, and poetry at Seattle Central College, has published three novels and two short story collections, earned a PEN Fiction Award and The Stranger Genius Award for Literature, and was twice named a Washington State Book Award Finalist. She spoke to CHS during a phone interview the day after the Pulitzer honors were announced.

Congratulations. When did you first learn your novel was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Fiction?

Thanks! I was in my office at Seattle Central College. Karen Maeda Allman, former events programmer at Elliott Bay Books, posted something general about “Tessa Hulls, Stacey Levine, and Pulitzer Prize.” It didn’t make any sense to me. I hadn’t heard anything from the Pulitzer Prize Board. I still haven’t. I think maybe they’re known for being silent once they make their decisions. Continue reading

Police investigate after man shot at 24th and Union

Police say a man was shot and taken to the hospital in an altercation early Saturday at 24th and Union.

SPD reports the 24-year-old was shot around 2:30 AM and taken to Harborview by a private vehicle:

Police determined that while the victim and friends were standing near the street, they were approached by a group of men and a fight broke out. During the altercation, one of the suspects shot at the group and struck the victim. The suspects fled the scene in a vehicle, and police did not locate them.

Police located evidence of the shooting and blood at 24th and Union and have asked anybody with information to call the SPD Violent Crimes Tip Line at 206-233-5000.

 

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This week in CHS history | Amarr Murphy-Paine murder, ‘Defund Seattle Police rally in Cal Anderson, new owner at Elliott Bay Book Company

Here are the top stories from this week in CHS history:

2024

 

Teen dead in shooting at Garfield High School — UPDATE: Mayor and SPD chief try to address gun violence


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