{Read} {PDF EPUB} ~download Grapes A Vintage View of Hockey by Don Cherry Don Cherry reflects on Rochester Amerks' 1960s dynasty. Don Cherry, announcer on CBC's "Hockey Night in Canada," played, coached and worked in Rochester from 1963 to 1974. He likes what the Buffalo Sabres are doing. (Photo: Carlos Osorio, ASSOCIATED PRESS) Don Cherry’s unmistakable voice came barreling through the phone. Like one of his thundering checks or right hooks from back in the day, it was deep and booming. The legendary player, coach and general manager of the is 81 years old now, and showing no signs of slowing down as he embarks on another hockey season as Canada’s media superhero. Still outspoken, still witty, still humble, still tough, still Grapes. And still with a big place in his heart for Rochester. “All the best to everyone down there, OK?" he said from his home in the Toronto area. Cherry spent 11 seasons of his life here in the 1960s and early ‘70s, the last half of his long and colorful professional minor league career. It’s where he won three Calder Cups with coach Joe Crozier. It’s where his coaching career began, first with Pittsford High School, then with the Amerks before his great ride with the Boston Bruins. It’s where he raised his family and made lifelong friends. It’s where he worked at Kodak in construction and sold Cadillacs when he thought his time in hockey was over. As the Amerks get set to drop the puck on their 60th anniversary season, Cherry, like each alumnus, is feeling a great sense of pride and nostalgia in having worn “the shield.’’ When you think of Canada and love of country, Cherry is right there with the maple leaf and the Mounties. But wearing “Americans’’ on his hockey sweater all those years was an honor he never forgot. With his broadcasting schedule (Toronto Blue Jays on Thursday and Hockey Night in Canada on Saturday), Cherry will be unable to attend Friday’s Amerks opener. But he wanted to let everyone know he’ll be there — as always — in spirit. “As I’ve said many times, my favorite city to live in — and I’ve been in some good ones in Boston and Denver — Rochester was always my favorite city and I’ve been in a lot of places, unfortunately," Cherry said. He played for 10 franchises, coached for three, moving by his conservative estimate 53 times. And he wouldn’t change a thing. “When Joe Crozier had the club, we won three championships and played in a final," recalled Cherry of that historic mid-1960s run. “The NHL teams wouldn’t come in and play exhibitions because we had a better team than most of the NHL guys. We were a powerhouse, we really were." Don Cherry served as Amerks coach from midway through the 1971-72 season through 1973-74. He had a 91-70-30 record and his final team was AHL regular season champ. He went on to a successful and colorful career with the storied Boston Bruins. (Photo: File photo) Those were the days of the Original Six and the was Rochester’s sole parent team. In his book Grapes: A Vintage View of Hockey. , Cherry recounts a 9-1 exhibition victory by Rochester over Toronto at Maple Leaf Gardens in 1963; the Leafs were defending Stanley Cup champs. Near the end of the game, Cherry yelled to Leafs coach Punch Imlach: “Hey, Punch, how long are we gonna play this game, until your guys get a couple of goals?’’ In 1964-65, the Amerks won the first of their six Calder Cups. They were loaded, featuring five 30- scorers and ironman Gerry Cheevers playing 72 games in net. Cherry, a rugged defenseman and natural locker room leader, would be one of seven men to play on all three of Crozier’s Cup winners, joining Red Armstrong, Les Duff, Dick Gamble, Bronco Horvath, Jim Pappin and Daryl Sly. Some 14 members of that ’64-65 team are enshrined in the Amerks Hall of Fame: everyone mentioned above along with Al Arbour, Gerry Ehman, Larry Hillman, Duane Rupp and Stan Smrke. “The Rochester Americans, what an organization," Cherry said. “Joe, him and Punch Imlach, they put all those great players in there. We were class, too. On the road, we wore beautiful burgundy blazers, stuff like that. We traveled first class and Joe treated us first class and later on so were the owners, and we’d play in front of packed houses, so it was a great legacy established in Rochester." Under neglectful Vancouver ownership during a turbulent era of expansion, that legacy took a beating with four years of missing the playoffs. But at the urging of new local owners, Cherry came out of retirement to restore the fun — and he did it his way. His 1972-73 team finished with 1,297 penalty minutes, with Bob “Battleship" Kelly and John Bednarski accounting for 511 between them (to go with 41 goals). The next season, with the Amerks finishing as regular season AHL champs, John Wensink picked up the gloves, er, the torch. “When I had the team they said 'it was like a circus coming into Rochester and 'Cherry is the ringmaster,’ " the ringmaster said. “There was an awful lot of flu going around when teams had to visit us." Cherry was 38 years old, a coach, a GM, earning $15,000 a year and loving life. And now he looks back fondly on that life. Amerks player and coach Don Cherry watches the Red Wings warm up before their game, Tuesday, Aug. 17, 1999. Cherry was inducted into the Frontier Field Walk of Fame before the game. (Photo: Annette Lein/file photo) Seven teammates from that ’64-65 team are deceased. Smrke, the first Yugoslavian-born player to play in the NHL, died young at 48. The great Armstrong, whose No. 6 is retired, was killed in a fall working his off-season job at a steel mill in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. He was 35. The beloved Arbour, who led the New York Islanders to four Stanley Cup championships and is a member of the Hockey Hall of Fame, died in August at 82. In the pre-expansion era, fine players toiled for years in the minors because NHL jobs were scarce. A lot more scarce than today with 30 teams. Today’s minor league player should remember that. He should count his blessings. “I guarantee — and maybe not me, but all those other guys on that team — Stan Smrke, Red Armstrong scored on his first shift in the NHL, Dick Gamble and Horvath and so many more would’ve had 15 years in the NHL," Cherry said. “They had to play all those years in the minors and when I see Red is gone and Al is gone and Stan Smrke is gone, and to think they never really had the chance to be in the National Hockey League for a long time, it makes me sad." Don Cherry then paused. Sour grapes? Grapes has none. “You know,’’ he said, “that’s life and we were happy to have jobs back in those days." Grapes: A Vintage View of Hockey by Don Cherry. Is your love affair with the NHL on hiatus? Abebooks understands that this is normally the time of year where millions of people are glued to the televisions cheering for their favorite team in the NHL playoff race. Sadly, this isn't the case this year. To help you feel better, Abebooks and Richard Harrison are offering you a poem about the loss of the season. Suggested and published by Abebooks.com, this poem marks the one year anniversary of the last NHL playoffs (April 7, 2004) and America’s National Poetry Month. Looking for more hockey books? NH Elegy. Once, men came home from war, or from the sides of family graves, to lace up skates and play for it as if everything could be remade in a silver bowl passed hand to hand. For years it etched the seasons with their winning names, and took the touch of triumph into each triumphant house. It paused just once – to mourn the dead, and stayed unmarked to mark their passing. Today, left idle in the Hall of Fame, while rich men quarrel to no profit at its base, untouched upon its plinth it stands. And all who see it can tell you now how a fallen thing is one that no one holds. WIN - Signed 10th Anniversary Edition. Abebooks.com has five signed 10th anniversary editions of Hero of the Play to give away to hockey fans missing their regular fix of NHL action. [Enter the Contest] Hero of the Play Richard Harrison. Harrison is an award-winning poet and diehard hockey fan. NH Elegy completes a trilogy of poems about the Stanley Cup. [Read the other poems] Newsletter Sign up for the Avid Reader Newsletter [ Sign Up Now ] Join the Avid Reader Book Club! Help us build the world's largest online book club! [ Sign Up Now ] I love the Abebooks website! I find everything here from fiction for my children, to gifts for my parents (and myself), and even outdated textbooks requested by my researcher boss. I tell everyone I know about it. Thanks, Kathy. Hero of the Play Richard Harrison. Ten years ago, Richard Harrison thrilled poetry and hockey lovers with a collection of poetry devoted to the great Canadian game. This beloved collection has been re-issued with a new selection of poems, The Hero in Overtime , an essay by the author on ten years of living with hockey poetry, and a foreword by Roy MacGregor. A Wild Look at Life in Hockey. To millions of Canadians, Don "Grapes" Cherry is the irascible co-host of "Molson Hockey Night's Coach's Corner," whose controversial, candid and highly spirited commentary has endeared him to hockey fans throughout the provinces. A larger-than-life figure in the annals of hockey, Cherry has done it all-from minor league player to head coach of the Boston Bruins to gregarious commentator. His is a story that only he could tell-because no one else could do him justice. The Game Ken Dryden. The Game is acknowledged as the best hockey book ever written, and as one of the best sports books of all time. More than just a hockey book, it has become an enduring classic - a reflective and provocative look at a life in hockey and at the game itself. Ken Dryden, a member of the Hockey Hall of Fame and the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame, is recognized as one of the greatest goalies ever to play the game. More than that, he is one of hockey’s most intelligent and insightful commentators. Lord Stanley's Cup Andrew Podnieks, Hockey Hall of Fame. This is the story of the most famous trophy in all of professional sports. From the obscure tale of a noble family in England that dates to the 14th century to the most recent winners of the Cup, hockey players and team personnel who are, in modern times, allowed one special day with the trophy during their summer of victory. Finally, hockey’s rabid fans have an anthology of their own, a showcase of writing as dynamic and diverse as the fastest, toughest sport itself. From coast to coast, the blueline to the slot, in the corners, and along the boards, here’s the high-adrenaline thrill of hockey at its best, in all its blazing glory. Editor Bryant Urstadt has rounded up a collection of classics old and new that takes you into the locker room, behind the benches with the great coaches, on the ice with the players, and back on the bus when the game is over. Once upon a time, they taught us to believe. They were the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team, a blue-collar bunch led by an unconventional coach, and they engineered perhaps the greatest sports moment of the twentieth century. Their �Miracle on Ice� has become a national fairy tale, but the real Cinderella story is even more remarkable. It is a legacy of hope, hard work, and homegrown triumph. It is a chronicle of everyday heroes who just wanted to play hockey happily ever after. It is still unbelievable. Wayne Gretzky is known as "The Great One" to fans around the world, and with good reason: He holds more records than any player in the history of the sport. From childhood games in his parents' backyard to his final days in the National Hockey League as a member of the New York Rangers, Gretzky displayed a natural talent and agility that thrilled crowds and attracted many new fans to the game. Portions of this page (c) 2004 Muze Inc. Some database content is also provided by Baker & Taylor Inc. Copyright 1995-2004 Muze Inc. For personal non-commercial use only. All rights reserved. Content for books is owned by Baker & Taylor, Inc. or its licensors and is subject to copyright and all other protections provided by applicable law. Grapes: : A Vintage View of Hockey. BY THE MAN WHO'S SEEN IT ALL! Favorite of the fans, players and press, Cherry takes you battling through the bush leagues, where the stick-swinging defenseman put up with the bus rides and burgers-while the NHL live like kings. You'll relive his glory days in Boston, where he clicked as coach until teh Bruins blew the Stanley Cup-and Cherry got blamed. You'll find out why he had to say :no" to teh dream chance of coaching the Maple leafs. You'll meet players like Bobby Orr and Wayne Gretzky. the managers and owners who blackballed him. and Blue, the white bull terrier reputedly the brains behind his coaching success. Undoubtedly the most colorful character who ever laced up a pair of skates, Cherry offers a no-holes-barred account of his triumphs, his defeats and his remarkable comeback. Grapes: A Vintage View of Hockey by Don Cherry. In continuing the honours for the Bruins and my Dad, I had the pleasure of reading a book that I could not put down. As you're probably aware, Don Cherry is quite the entertainer when he's on CBC's Hockey Night In Canada in his Coach's Corner segment. I've learned that Dad hates missing Grapes over the years because he loved the Bruins when Don Cherry was coaching them. Thanks to Dad, I thought it might be a good idea to check out Grapes: A Vintage View of Hockey , written by Don Cherry and Stan Fischler, and published by Prentice Hall Canada back in 1982. This book is an absolutely masterpiece because it feels like Don Cherry is actually telling you these stories while sitting with you over a couple of beverages! I honestly found myself chuckling at a number of stories in this book simply because of Cherry's ability to tell a great tale. While we all know Donald S. Cherry quite well, Stan Fischler deserves a little recognition in his own right. Fischler is probably best known in the New York region for his work on the MSG network during Islanders, Devils, and Rangers games. Known as "The Hockey Maven", Fischler has written over 90 books to date about his two passions: hockey and the New York subway system. His most recent hockey book, Metro Ice: A Century of Hockey in Greater New York , was published in 1999, and is all about the Islanders, Devils, and Rangers. His most famous book on subways is Uptown, Downtown , published in 1979. His wife, Shirley, is a co-writer on a lot of his books, and he was the 2007 recipient of the Lester Patrick Trophy. Fischler is a very accomplished writer! If there was one thing I noticed about Grapes: A Vintage View of Hockey , it was that it could have been used as the historical piece for the CBC's production of Keep Your Head Up, Kid - The Don Cherry Story . Cherry talks about all of the great moments in his life - being named as coach of the Bruins, winning Calder Cups with the Rochester Americans, and all of the great players and people that he had the pleasure of meeting throughout his travels. He also speaks of some of the more contentious moments like his firings, his dealings with coaches and management as a player, and the difficulties of being a career minor-league player. In the book, Cherry talks of his time as a player with the Hershey Bears, his very tumultuous time under Eddie Shore when he was part of the team, his era in Quebec as a member of Trois-Rivieres (or Three-Rivers as Don calls it throughout the chapter), his short time in Spokane, Washington, and his eventual success in Rochester as a member of the Americans. The chapter about Don growing up in Kingston was especially interesting simply because Don Cherry, the personality, doesn't really talk much about his father who, from his writing, had a great respect for and who he loved very much. I found the information about his time in Denver as coach of the Colorado Rockies to be particularly interesting. Despite Don's brother, Richard, warning him that the job in Denver might not be the best choice for Don and his style of coaching, Don decided to take the job coaching the lowly Rockies as he wanted the challenge that came with building a team. However, just after agreeing to the job with Colorado, Harold Ballard offered Don Cherry the head coaching job of the Toronto Maple Leafs! Being a man of his word, though, Cherry would not walk away from the Rockies after agreeing to a deal with them. Could you imagine: Don Cherry as the head coach of the Maple Leafs. It almost happened! However, Don found out that not all in Denver was rosy. In fact, he and General Manager Ray Miron started off on the wrong foot when it comes to hockey sense and hockey knowledge. Cherry writes, Poor goaltending, poor draft choices, and poor signings didn't help Cherry's cause in Denver. He did find a few gems in the players that came through the door to the Rockies dressing room: Barry Beck, Lanny McDonald, Rene Robert, and Bobby Schmautz (who Cherry also coached in Boston). Beck, however, would be dealt to the Rangers after the Rockies refused to pay him the money he wanted as their top player. With the few foot soldiers that Cherry had at his disposal, the Rockies struggled, and the owners eventually decided to replace Cherry because they wanted a winner and they felt that he couldn't work with the younger players - a claim that Cherry denies after his success with the Bruins and a number of their young players! After talking to Dad, a lot of the stories that Cherry tells are ones he wasn't aware of, and that made Grapes: A Vintage View of Hockey even more special as Dad is now reading it feverishly. If I enjoyed it, I'm sure Dad will find it to be one of the better reads he has undertaken in the last few years. Dad isn't much for spending a few hours reading, but it seems this is one book that even he's having trouble putting down! Because of the incredible stories that Don Cherry told in Grapes: A Vintage View of Hockey and because I can share this book with my Dad who loves Cherry and the Bruins, I have to award Grapes: A Vintage View of Hockey the Teebz's Book Club Seal of Approval! Honestly, if you're able to find Grapes: A Vintage View of Hockey at your local bookstore or online, I highly recommend it simply for the incredible hockey stories contained on its 222 pages. You won't be disappointed - it's a beauty! Grapes Vintage View Hockey by Don Cherry. Light rubbing wear to cover, spine and page edges. Very minimal writing or notations in margins not affecting the text. Possible clean ex-library copy, with their stickers and or stamp(s). Prentice Hall Canada Inc. Paperback. Condition: VERY GOOD. Grapes:: A Vintage View of Hockey. Cherry, Don; Fischler, Stan. Published by Avon (1999) Used - Softcover Condition: Fair. Quantity available: 1. Avon, 1999. Mass Market Paperback. Condition: Fair. Grapes:: A Vintage View of Hockey. Don Cherry, Stan Fischler. Published by Avon (1999) Used - Softcover Condition: GOOD. Quantity available: 1. Spine creases, wear to binding and pages from reading. May contain limited notes, underlining or highlighting that does affect the text. Possible ex library copy, will have the markings and stickers associated from the library. Accessories such as CD, codes, toys, may not be included. Avon, 1999. Mass Market Paperback. Condition: GOOD. Grapes:: A Vintage View of Hockey. Don Cherry, Stan Fischler. Published by Avon (1999) Used - Softcover Condition: GOOD. Quantity available: 1. Spine creases, wear to binding and pages from reading. May contain limited notes, underlining or highlighting that does affect the text. Possible ex library copy, will have the markings and stickers associated from the library. Accessories such as CD, codes, toys, may not be included. Avon, 1999. Mass Market Paperback. Condition: GOOD. Grapes:: A Vintage View of Hockey. Don Cherry, Stan Fischler. Published by Avon (1999) Used - Softcover Condition: GOOD. Quantity available: 1. Spine creases, wear to binding and pages from reading. May contain limited notes, underlining or highlighting that does affect the text. Possible ex library copy, will have the markings and stickers associated from the library. Accessories such as CD, codes, toys, may not be included. Avon, 1999. Mass Market Paperback. Condition: GOOD. Grapes : A Vintage View of Hockey. Cherry, Don. Published by HarperCollins Publishers (1999) Used - Softcover Condition: Good. Quantity available: 2. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside. HarperCollins Publishers, 1999. Condition: Good. First Paperback Printing. Grapes:: A Vintage View of Hockey. Cherry, Don; Fischler, Stan. Published by Avon (1999) Used - Softcover Condition: Good. Quantity available: 1. A+ Customer service! Satisfaction Guaranteed! Book is in Used-Good condition. Pages and cover are clean and intact. Used items may not include supplementary materials such as CDs or access codes. May show signs of minor shelf wear and contain limited notes and highlighting. Avon, 1999. Condition: Good. Grapes:: A Vintage View of Hockey. Fischler, Stan,Cherry, Don. Published by Avon (1999) Used - Softcover Condition: Acceptable. Quantity available: 1. This is a used book. It may contain highlighting/underlining and/or the book may show heavier signs of wear . It may also be ex-library or without dustjacket. This is a used book. It may contain highlighting/underlining and/or the book may show heavier signs of wear . It may also be ex-library or without dustjacket. Avon, 1999. Mass Market Paperback. Condition: Acceptable. Grapes : A Vintage View of Hockey. Stan Fischler; Don Cherry. Published by HarperCollins Publishers (1999) Used - Softcover Condition: Very Good. Quantity available: 1. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less. HarperCollins Publishers, 1999. Mass Market Paperback. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. Grapes:: A Vintage View of Hockey. Don Cherry; Stan Fischler. Published by Avon (1999) Used - Softcover Condition: Good. Quantity available: 1. Avon, 1999. Mass Market Paperback. Condition: Good. Grapes: A vintage view of hockey. Cherry, Don. Published by Prentice-Hall Canada (1982) Used - Hardcover Condition: Very Good. Quantity available: 1. Prentice-Hall Canada, 1982. Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Grapes: A vintage view of hockey. Don Cherry. Published by Prentice-Hall Canada (1982) Used - Hardcover Condition: VERY GOOD. Quantity available: 1. Light rubbing wear to cover, spine and page edges. Very minimal writing or notations in margins not affecting the text. Possible clean ex-library copy, with their stickers and or stamp(s). Prentice-Hall Canada, 1982. Hardcover. Condition: VERY GOOD. Grapes: A vintage view of hockey. Don Cherry. Published by Prentice-Hall Canada (1982) Used - Hardcover Condition: VERY GOOD. Quantity available: 1. Light rubbing wear to cover, spine and page edges. Very minimal writing or notations in margins not affecting the text. Possible clean ex-library copy, with their stickers and or stamp(s). Prentice-Hall Canada, 1982. Hardcover. Condition: VERY GOOD. Grapes: A vintage view of hockey. Cherry, Don. Published by Prentice-Hall Canada (1982) Used - Hardcover Condition: Good. Quantity available: 1. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less. Prentice-Hall Canada, 1982. Hardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Grapes: A vintage view of hockey. Cherry, Don. Published by Prentice-Hall Canada (1982) Used - Hardcover Condition: Good. Quantity available: 1. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less. Prentice-Hall Canada, 1982. Hardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Grapes: A vintage view of hockey. Cherry, Don. Published by Prentice-Hall Canada (1982) Used - Hardcover Condition: As New. Quantity available: 1. Pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less. Prentice-Hall Canada, 1982. Hardcover. Condition: As New. No Jacket. Grapes: A Vintage View of Hockey. Cherry, Don & Stan Fischler. Published by Spike / Avon (1999) Used - Softcover Condition: good+ Quantity available: 1. mass market paperback; 274 pages + 16pp b/w photos; reading crease to spine, which has a very slight lean. Spike / Avon, 1999. Soft Cover. Condition: good+. 2nd ptg. Paperback. Grapes:: A Vintage View of Hockey. Cherry, Don, Fischler, Stan. Published by Avon (1999) Used - Softcover Condition: Acceptable. Quantity available: 1. Bargain book!. Avon, 1999. Mass Market Paperback. Condition: Acceptable. First Paperback Printing. Grapes:: A Vintage View of Hockey. Cherry, Don, Fischler, Stan. Published by Avon (1999) Used - Softcover Condition: Good. Quantity available: 1. Grapes: A Vintage View of Hockey. Avon, 1999. Mass Market Paperback. Condition: Good. First Paperback Printing. Grapes: A vintage view of hockey. Cherry, Don. Published by Prentice-Hall Canada (1982) Used - Hardcover Condition: Good. Quantity available: 1. A+ Customer service! Satisfaction Guaranteed! Book is in Used-Good condition. Pages and cover are clean and intact. Used items may not include supplementary materials such as CDs or access codes. May show signs of minor shelf wear and contain limited notes and highlighting. Prentice-Hall Canada, 1982. Condition: Good. Grapes: A vintage view of hockey. Don Cherry. Published by Prentice-Hall Canada (1982) Used - Hardcover Condition: Good. Quantity available: 1. Prentice-Hall Canada, 1982. Hardcover. Condition: Good. Grapes: a Vintage View of Hockey. Cherry, Don, with Fischler, Stan. Published by Avon, Scarborough, Ontario. (1982) Used - Softcover Condition: Very Good. Quantity available: 1. FIRST PAPERBACK EDITION & FIRST PRINTING. This copy is in Very Good condition: the text is clear, bright, and completely unmarked but shows some aging; the binding is tight; there is a dealer's mark fep and bottom edge. The covers are also excellent, although showing some signs of wear. The essence of the book--the text and pages of photos--are excellent. We have a five star rating because of our fulfillment success and because our descriptions are accurate. We guarantee: No Nasty Surprises. For the Grapes Collector. Avon, Scarborough, Ontario., 1982. Paperback. Condition: Very Good. Paperback. Grapes : A Vintage View of Hockey. Don Cherry. Published by Prentice Hall Canada Inc. Used - Softcover Condition: GOOD. Quantity available: 1. Spine creases, wear to binding and pages from reading. May contain limited notes, underlining or highlighting that does affect the text. Possible ex library copy, will have the markings and stickers associated from the library. Accessories such as CD, codes, toys, may not be included. Prentice Hall Canada Inc. Paperback. Condition: GOOD. Grapes: A vintage view of hockey. Cherry, Don. Published by Prentice-Hall Canada (1982) Used - Hardcover Condition: UsedAcceptable. Quantity available: 1. Prentice-Hall Canada, 1982. Condition: UsedAcceptable. book. Grapes : A Vintage View of Hockey. Cherry, Don. Published by Prentice-Hall Canada (1982) Used - Hardcover Condition: Good. Quantity available: 1. Ships from the UK. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside. Prentice-Hall Canada, 1982. Condition: Good. First Edition. Grapes. A Vintage View of Hockey. Cherry, Don and Stan Fischler: Published by Scarborough, Prentice-Hall, (1982) Used - Softcover. Quantity available: 1. 222 Seiten. Zahlreiche Fotos. In englischer Sprache. Name auf dem Vorsatzblatt, Papier etwas gebr�unt, sonst ordentliches und sauberes Exemplar. Sprache: Englisch, Gewicht in Gramm: 370. Original-Broschur, 15x23cm, Zustand: 3. Scarborough, Prentice-Hall, 1982. Grapes : A Vintage View of Hockey. Don Cherry. Published by Prentice Hall Canada Inc. (1993) Used - Softcover Condition: Good. Quantity available: 1. Ships from the UK. Shows some signs of wear, and may have some markings on the inside. Prentice Hall Canada Inc., 1993. Condition: Good. 2nd Printing.