....January 28, 11:40 PM
 
 

A Guide To The Official Guide

By MICHAEL SCHENKLER

Follow me on Twitter @QueensTribune

The Blue Book you are holding (or the online edition you are viewing) is the 2010 version of an annual guide which is ending its second decade of publication. Yes this 20th Annual Tribune Guide to Queens has been the most comprehensive guide prepared about our borough for the last two decades.

Our Official Guide To Queens was born 20 years ago in 1991 and has become a working reference book for all who have occasion to navigate through Queens, its information, bureaucracy and life.

As we at the Tribune prepare to celebrate our 40th anniversary, we take note of the Guide, just half our age, our most referred to publication each year.

We at the Trib have been chronicling the lives of the people of Queens for four full decades and we continue to try our best to bring some order to the hodgepodge of County and City officialdom as well as answering some basic questions about our borough - the most ethnically diverse place anywhere on Earth. We hope our efforts presented on these pages help our readers cope.

2010: Trib continues to provide all the essentials and more as it celebrates its 40th year.
We believe our Official Guide is indispensable to anyone living in, doing business in, researching or even passing through Queens, New York. We use it as a regular phone directory to everything Queens, an elected-officials-names spell-checker, an atlas (community boards, legislative districts and much more), an emergency contact guide and a mini-encyclopedia/fact checker. It provides you with contact information for all the resources to unjangle your chaos, soothe your soul, enrich your mind and get you where you want to go.

We keep a copy of The Queens Blue Book next to our desk at home and one in each of our offices - here in Queens, and in Huntington, where we guide the Long Islander newspaper group started by Walt Whitman in 1838. Inheriting the legacy of Whitman, one of the greatest American chroniclers in our history, has given me new insight into publishing history and perspectives on the meaning of a newspaper.

When we first published our official guide in 1991, the concept of a newspaper-produced reference book for its readers was unheard of. An ever-increasing number of newspapers throughout the City, State and nation have also followed our lead and our Official Guide concept is being embraced by newspaper publishers coast-to-coast. We have created the industry standard. It’s been imitated by many - but never equaled.

The Tribune has pioneered much more than just the “Official Guide” concept. Community journalism on the east coast saw its first four-color pages in 1988 in the Trib. The glossy covers first dressed the Trib way back in 1990; our Web site appeared a dozen years ago and was followed by an “e-mall,” Queens’ first online shopping portal. We’re not stopping now.

The Official Guide To Queens 2010, which you have in your hands – at least virtually, is just the beginning of the story. For the past seven years, the Tribune has been publishing a monthly magazine special -- stitched and trimmed, bound in a glossy wrap with an in-depth Queens-focused theme.

Watch for these monthly specials. They will inform, entertain and hopefully cause you to think. We’ll provide the official info and the unofficial dope. We’ll compile the information and then push the envelope. Our specials will be found throughout the year, on the coffee tables, office shelves and desks of the decision makers, party goers, businesspeople and families whose daily lives include the excitement of Queens.

Watch for our super March 2010 Glossy Souvenir Edition celebrating the Queens Tribune’s 40th Annversary.

There will be a lot more excitement in months ahead. Readers, grab your copy - the glossies move fast - or mail in your $12 subscription (see subscription form Page 92 - or find it on the web). Shortly, you will be able to sign up online and receive a complete email version – including our advertiser which make this all possible. Advertisers, call (718) 357-7400, Ext. 132 to be part of the most exciting journalistic effort in the city’s most interesting and vital borough.

Our editorial team has had every phone number, every fact and every comma checked and double-checked. Still, we are certain that our readers will find something less than perfect. Please let us know. We want to print corrections, correct our online edition and update our files for next year’s Blue Book. You can send suggestions or corrections to: bluebook@queenstribune.com, or fax (718-357-9417) or mail them to the Tribune.

Hundreds of people have contributed to this, the Queens Blue Book. It is the culmination of the effort of journalists, artists, salespersons, office staff and friends who have walked through our doors over the past 40 years. The marvelous staff who have perfected this edition have earned my gratitude and respect.

Our readers, who throughout the year emailed, faxed and mailed us advice, suggestions, complaints, omissions and errors, and our advertisers who loyally support our effort because they believe in the Trib and they believe in Queens, are as much a part of our story as anyone else.

There are also my partners: a dozen or so special people - family and friends - who believed in me and in this marvelous product and came up with the funding to enable me and my longtime friend and partner Gary Ackerman -- you know the guy -- to buy our paper back in 2002 and give it new life and a renewed mission chronicling and advocating for Queens, the most exciting place on Earth. Their commitment has enabled us to grow and explore new and exciting publishing avenues.

And Lil, Allison and Lee, who provide me with the motivation and creative inspiration to help bring what we do at the Trib to a new level each and every year. To all of you, this Blue Book is yours; may it continue to fill your days with Queens information and color.

MSchenkler@QueensTribune.com

Michael Schenkler can be reached via this
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Michael Schenkler can be reached via this contact form.