Sunday, August 31, 2025
6 posts from August
Reports: Early morning shooting injures 3 outside Lillian Wald Houses
Week in Grieview
• At the prayer vigil for Most Holy Redeemer (Monday, Aug. 25)
• Carlina Rivera officially steps down from her City Council seat (Monday, Aug. 25)
• Gas service restored at C&B CafĂ© on 7th Street (Wednesday, Aug. 27)
• How to contribute art to a memorial zine for the old East River Park (Wednesday, Aug. 27)
• IDLES pack into Night Club 101 for surprise East Village set (Saturday, Aug. 30)
• Migrating warbler found dead outside Steiner East Village on 11th Street (Friday, Aug. 29)
• Sushi and coffee for the vacant storefronts at 106 Avenue B (Wednesday, Aug. 27)
JFK Jr. and Carolyn Bessette’s infamous fight restaged in Tompkins Square Park
Small blaze quickly doused on Avenue A and St. Mark's Place
Charlie Parker Jazz Festival keeps swinging in Tompkins Square Park
Saturday, August 30, 2025
Key Food gets the fine art treatment on Avenue A
This is a work in progress. The light changed, so he started packing up for the day... and will be back soon to finish the painting.
IDLES pack into Night Club 101 for surprise East Village set

Someone tore a tree from the ground and left it in a 1st Avenue trash can
Previously on EV Grieve:
Saturday's opening shot
Friday, August 29, 2025
Whisper to a 'Sting'
Migrating warbler found dead outside Steiner East Village on 11th Street
A prayer vigil this evening outside Most Holy Redeemer
Aug. 28
East Village musician Jesse Malin’s memoir, 'Almost Grown,' due April 2026
Jesse Malin has shared details about his upcoming memoir, "Almost Grown."
He recently announced on Instagram that the book is available for preorder ahead of its release on April 7, 2026. (There's also a preorder package that includes several bonus items, such as a collection of fliers from his bands, including Heart Attack and D Generation.)
"Almost Grown" is a raw, honest, and often funny account of how a hyperactive kid from Queens made his dreams come true — and the hustlers, sweethearts, misfits, and lifelong friends he met along the way. With Malin as its streetwise narrator, the book has more in common with "The Basketball Diaries" or "Just Kids" than with the standard rock biography. Although music is at the core of Malin’s soul, the memoir welcomes the reader into the tumultuous inner world of a boy from a broken home determined to create a life he could love.