Wikipedia:WikiProject Bibliographies
Bibliographies in library
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Shortcut | WP:BIB |
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Category | WikiProject Bibliographies |
Portals | Books portal Contents/Lists portal |
Parent project(s) |
Books, Lists, Academic Journals |
Project banner template | {{WikiProject Bibliographies}} |
Helps organise child projects? | Yes |
Has goals? | Yes |
Assessment | Wikipedia:WikiProject Bibliographies#Reviews and assessments |
GoalsEdit
A bibliography, the product of the practice of bibliography, is a systematic list of books and other works such as journal articles. Bibliographies range from "works cited" lists at the end of books and articles to complete, independent publications. As separate works, they may be in bound volumes or computerised bibliographic databases. A library catalog, while not referred to as a "bibliography," is bibliographic in nature.
Bibliographies differ from library catalogs by including only relevant items rather than all items present in a particular library. Bibliographies are a primary tool in academic research for students, faculty and researchers.[1] Within Wikipedia, well crafted bibliographies provide editors with a readily available list of sources that can be used to support creation and expansion of articles on related topics.
Within Wikipedia, bibliographies are specialized lists of books, journals and other references important to the topic of the bibliography. For example: Bibliography of classical guitar is a list of works important to the study of Classical guitar. Bibliographies may also be a listing of published works of an author. For example: Jimmy Carter bibliography is a list of works authored by Jimmy Carter.
The primary goal of this project is to improve bibliographies and expand their scope within Wikipedia by establishing a consistent article structure; by ensuring bibliographies follow Wikipedia policies, guidelines and manuals of style; and by identifying topics needing bibliographic coverage and encouraging editors to build those bibliographies.
As of 20 September 2015, there are 937 articles within the scope of WikiProject Bibliographies, of which 23 are featured. This makes up 0.02% of the articles on Wikipedia and 0.31% of featured lists. Including non-article pages, such as talk pages, redirects, categories, etcetera, there are 2,166 pages in the project.
Relevant guidelines and manual of styleEdit
Bibliographies are Wikipedia articles. They must comply with fundamental principles such as Neutral point of view, and policies such as No original research and Verifiability.
Bibliographies are Lists and must comply with the following list-related guidelines and manuals of style:
- the notability guideline for stand-alone lists.
- the manual of style for lists in general.
- the manual of style for stand-alone lists.
Bibliographies of living authors must comply with the guidelines for biographies of living persons.
Notability of bibliography articlesEdit
A Bibliography of topic article must meet Wikipedia's guideline for stand-alone list notability which is quoted here for clarity.
Notability of lists (whether titled as "List of Xs" or "Xs") is based on the group. A list topic is considered notable if it has been discussed as a group or set by independent reliable sources, per the above guidelines; notable list topics are appropriate for a stand-alone list. The entirety of the list does not need to be documented in sources for notability, only that the grouping or set in general has been. Because the group or set is notable, the individual items in the list do not need to be independently notable, although editors may, at their discretion, choose to limit large lists by only including entries for independently notable items or those with Wikipedia articles.
For a bibliography on a topic to be notable, the members of that bibliography should be discussed as a group in reliable sources. This discussion may take the form of a published standalone bibliography on the topic, a bibliography in a published reliable source on the topic or recommendations for further reading on the topic published in a reliable source on the topic.
ExampleEdit
For the article Bibliography of fly fishing there are reliable sources that demonstrate notability of the bibliography for each of the source types above.
- Hampton, Jack (2008). Ken Callahan and Paul Morgan, ed. Hampton's Angling Bibliography-Fishing Books 1881-1949. Ellesmere, UK: Medlar Press. ISBN 9781899600878. - A published bibliography of angling literature, first published in 1947.
- Bark, Conrad Voss (1992). "Bibliography". A History of Fly Fishing. Shropshire, UK: Melvin Unwin Books. pp. 175–181. ISBN 1873674031. - Source contains a comprehensive bibliography of fly fishing related books.
- Gingrich, Arnold (1974). "Annotated List of Some Choice Fishing in Print Since 1935". The Fishing In Print-A Guided Tour Through Five Centuries of Angling Literature. New York: Winchester Press. pp. 311–336. - Source contains an annotated list of recommended reading on fly fishing.
Recommended structureEdit
This page contains advice about style. As such it contains the recommendations and/or opinions of one or more WikiProjects on how to present articles within their area of interest. This advice is not a formal Wikipedia policy or guideline and is not part of the Manual of Style. WikiProjects are encouraged to write advice pages addressing issues within their areas of interest and expertise. Please update the page as needed or discuss it on the talk page. |
The following subsections recommend a consistent naming convention for bibliographies and a preferred structure for both topical and author bibliographies. The structures recommended are designed to enhance the usefulness of bibliographies for Wikipedia users as well assist editors in ensuring bibliographies meet Wikipedia policies, guidelines and the manual of style.
NamingEdit
The policy within Wikipedia:Article titles applies to the titles of Wikipedia bibliographies. This project seeks to establish consistency in naming bibliographies within the encyclopedia and recommends the following:
- A bibliography on a topic such as biology should be named Bibliography of biology. Because Bibliography is a recognized type of list in Wikipedia, an explicit use of the word is preferable to titles such as List of important books about biology and Publications on biology. Words like important, influential, landmark, notable and popular in the title are difficult to defend without significant explanation and should be avoided.
- Topical bibliographies where the topic is a person should be named: Bibliography of works on John Doe. This eliminates confusion with John Doe bibliography which lists works by John Doe (an author bibliography).
- Topical bibliographies where the topic is a non-person should be named: Bibliography of topic
- A bibliography of an author such as Mark Twain should be named Mark Twain bibliography.
- Author bibliographies that contain other types of published works such as music (discography), or film (filmography) in addition to published literature should be called Works of Author, Works of Rambhadracharya for example.
The topic or author of a bibliography should be notable and have an article in Wikipedia.
Topical bibliographiesEdit
Topical bibliographies are lists of relevant books, journals and other references on a specific topic. The lead of a topical bibliography should establish the notability of the bibliography by citing at least two sources that demonstrate that relevant books, journals and other references on a specific topic have been discussed as a group.
Explicit, discriminate inclusion criteriaEdit
When creating a new bibliography, include a concise lead with explicit criteria for what entries are – and are not – suitable. The inclusion criteria are for the benefit of both readers and other editors; they provide part of the context for the list and make a case for its notability. They should be tied tightly to the title of the bibliography and its organization. Avoid indiscriminate criteria – some of the most popular challenges to bibliographies or lists of works are based on the Wikipedia policies Wikipedia is not a directory and Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of information. Well-defined context helps counter those challenges.
- Explicit lead example:
Bibliography of Colditz Castle is a list of works about Colditz Castle, its history as POW camp Oflag IV-C, the attempts to escape Oflag IV-C and many prisoners memoirs.
- (The lead leaves no doubt as to what constitutes a valid bibliography entry.)
- Slightly indiscriminate lead example:
Bibliography of Prem Rawat and related organizations lists bibliographical material regarding Prem Rawat and organizations like Divine Light Mission, Elan Vital and The Prem Rawat Foundation.
- (The inclusion of the words "and related organizations" in the title and "and organizations like ..." in the lead create a partially indiscrimate inclusion criteria since "related organizations" and "organizations like" are not fully defined. Although literature about or authored by Prem Rawat is clearly within the scope of the bibliography, its not clear what kind of relationship to Prem Rawat is necessary to include other literature. )
- Indiscriminate lead example:
List of books about risk is a list of books about risk issues.
- (The concept of risk is not defined in the lead nor is it linked to the article on risk. Even if it were, the article reveals that risk is such a broad and variable term that it would be difficult to discriminate works about risk from works not about risk. This is a classic case of an indiscriminate lead.)
Single article bibliographiesEdit
Most topical bibliographies will be single articles or lists with enough entries to warrant a separate list, yet not so many that a summary style is required. If there are fewer than 10 possible entries in the bibliography, then those entries should be included in a Further reading section in the topic article.
In each section, bibliography entries should be organized either as a bulleted list or wikitable in chronological or alphabetical (by author) order. Bulleted lists and wikitables should not be mixed within the bibliography. Chronological entries are most suitable for bibliographies on topics with a long history of literature on the topic. Chronological entries allow the user to see a progression on works on the topic over time. Alphabetical listings are suitable for shorter bibliographies and those where the difference between the earliest and latest publication dates is not great. Section headings are useful for distinguishing between works of different type or focus.
ExamplesEdit
Alphabetical bulleted list:
- Baker, Don (1997). Ghost Towns of the Montana Prairie. Boulder, CO: Fred Pruett Books. ISBN 0871080508.
- Fifer, Barbara (2002). Montana Mining Ghost Towns. Helena, Montana: Farcountry Press. ISBN 1560371951.
- Miller, Don C. (1982). Ghost Towns of Montana. Boulder, Colorado: Pruett Publishing. ISBN 0871086069.
- Whitfield, William W. (2007). Montana Ghost Towns and Gold Camps - A Pictorial Guide. Stevensville, Montana: Stoneydale Press Publishing Co. ISBN 1931291381.
Chronological bulleted list:
- Miller, Don C. (1982). Ghost Towns of Montana. Boulder, Colorado: Pruett Publishing. ISBN 0871086069.
- Baker, Don (1997). Ghost Towns of the Montana Prairie. Boulder, CO: Fred Pruett Books. ISBN 0871080508.
- Fifer, Barbara (2002). Montana Mining Ghost Towns. Helena, Montana: Farcountry Press. ISBN 1560371951.
- Whitfield, William W. (2007). Montana Ghost Towns and Gold Camps - A Pictorial Guide. Stevensville, Montana: Stoneydale Press Publishing Co. ISBN 1931291381.
Sortable table:
Author | Title | Year | Publisher | ISBN | Notes |
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Miller, Don C. | Ghost Towns of Montana | 1982 | Pruett Publishing, Boulder, Colorado | 0871086069 | |
Baker, Don | Ghost Towns of the Montana Prairie | 1997 | Fred Pruett Books, Boulder, CO | 0871080508 | |
Fifer, Barbara | Montana Mining Ghost Towns | 2002 | Far Country Press, Helena, MT | 1560371951 | |
Whitfield, William W. | Montana Ghost Towns and Gold Camps-A Pictorial Guide | 2007 | Stoneydale Press Publishing Co., Stevensville, MT | 1931291381 |
Summary style bibliographiesEdit
The overall topic of some bibliographies maybe so broad as to require a summary style bibliography in which the topic is divided into logical sections, each with only a few entries. Each section should have a {{Main|Bibliography of sub-topic}} template directing the user to the bibliography of the sub-topic. The lead of a summary style bibliography needs to establish discriminate inclusion criteria for the topic and sub-topics just as in the single article bibliography.
Sourcing bibliographic entriesEdit
It should be possible to verify that each entry in a bibliography meets the inclusion criteria. Here are some simple rules.
- If an entry has a Wikipedia article, merely wikilinking it to the article verifies it because the reader can navigate to the article and determine if the entry meets the inclusion criteria:
- Halford, F. M. (1886). Floating Flies and How to Dress Them. London: Sampson, Low, Marston, Searle, and Rivington.
- If an entry does not have a Wikipedia article and there might be any doubt that it belongs in the bibliography, it should be cited with a reliable source that verifies its relevance:
- Gingrich, Arnold (1973). The Joys of Trout. New York: Crown Publishers, Inc. ISBN 0517505843.[2]
- If an entry includes annotations, even if there is a Wikipedia article on it, the annotations may be verified by citations:
- Venables, Colonel Robert (1662). The Experienced Angler or Angling Improved. London: Richard Marriott., Extensively cited in Herd's The Fly, Venables work provides great insight into the fly tackle and techniques being used in the 17th century[3]
- A quotation associated with an entry may be useful to show the relevance of the entry to the bibliography. All quotations should be cited according to: the guidelines on quotations:
- Gingrich, Arnold (1974). The Fishing In Print-A Guided Tour Through Five Centuries of Angling Literature. New York: Winchester Press., Gingrich, the well known founding editor of Esquire magazine surveys the major pieces of classic and modern fly fishing literature up through the 1950s. It is an excellent read to get a better understanding of the evolution of the various styles of fly fishing—wet, nymphs, dry, etc. as originally written about by the likes of Halford, Skues, Gordon and Jennings along with many others.
Arnold Gingrich, founding editor of Esquire magazine, is a tremendous part of the literary history of fly fishing. The Fishing In Print, The Joys of Trout, and The Well-Tempered Angler are indispensable titles to the well-read fly fisherman of today.— Glenn Law, A Concise History of Fly Fishing, 1995.[4]
Author bibliographiesEdit
Author bibliographies are lists of the published works of an author. The author should be notable and have a Wikipedia article. If there are fewer than 10 works attributable to the author, they should be included in a bibliography or list of works section within the main article.
LeadEdit
The lead of an author bibliography may state something to the effect:
The Umberto Eco bibliography contains a list of works published by Umberto Eco.
Including a description of the various types and numbers of works published, their period of publication and highlights of the most prestigious works will make the lead more compelling. The William Faulkner bibliography is a good example of such a lead. Ensure that the lead for a living author follows the guidelines for biographies of living persons.
Mixed topical and author bibliographies: Some biblliographies contain both works written by the author and works about the author written by others. Leads in these cases should be as explicit as possible on the inclusion criteria for works about the author.
The Richard Nixon bibliography includes publications by Former President Richard Nixon and books and articles about him and his policies.
InfoboxEdit
Author bibliographies that contain {{Infobox bibliography}} allow for an image of the author and display a summary of works published. Using an infobox also makes the data within it available to DBpedia. The use of infoboxes is neither required nor prohibited for any article.
Sections and list styleEdit
Generally, author bibliographies are best presented in chronological order of publication with the earliest works listed first. If the author has a comprehensive set of works spanning different topics, genres or types of publications, the use of section headings is appropriate to delineate those differences. However, within individual sections, works should be listed chronologically.
Lists of works may be in ordered in list format or wikitable format. Either is acceptable but generally should not be mixed within any given bibliography.
Book linksEdit
When a book is available online through a site such as Internet Archive, Project Gutenberg, or Google Books, it may be useful to provide a link to the book so readers can view it. If the book, journal or report is available online, you may include the |"url"
parameter to link the entry to the online version of the work. There is no requirement either to add or remove such links. A link to a Google Book should only be added if the book is available for preview; such links will not work if the book is only available in snippet view.
White, Phillip M (October 2004). Bibliography of Native American bibliographies. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-31941-9.
Using citation templatesEdit
Citation templates are used to bring consistent formatting to bibliographic entries and help ensure all important bibliographic information is included in the entry. The use of citation templates is neither encouraged nor discouraged. If the editors at a bibliography choose to use them, then the following templates are the most commonly used in bibliographies:
- {{cite book}} – the example below has a link to an online version:
Anderson, Fred (2000). Crucible of War: The Seven Years' War 1754-1766. Random House Digital, Inc. ISBN 978-0-375-70636-3.
For an entry in an author bibliography, use |authormask=
to avoid repeating the author's name. For example, in the above book entry, |authormask=1
gives the result:
-
— (2000). Crucible of War: The Seven Years' War 1754-1766. Random House Digital, Inc. ISBN 978-0-375-70636-3.
- {{cite journal}} – cite journal with a link to an online version:
Hayden, F.V. (February 1872). "More about the Yellowstone". Scribner's Monthly III (4): 388–396.
- {{cite report}}:
Culpin, Mary Shivers (1994). The History of the Construction of the Road System of Yellowstone National Park 1872-1966 (Report). National Park Service.
- {{cite web}}:
Ellis, Warren (2011-04-11). "The Spaces Between Stars". Mulholland Books. Retrieved 2011-09-02.
For a complete listing of available citation templates, see: Category:Citation templates
Template limitsEdit
The MediaWiki software that powers Wikipedia has several parameters that limit the complexity of a page, thus limiting the amount of templates that can be included. When a page reaches the template limit, the most common solution for a bibliography is to convert some "citation templates" to a "manual style" citation.
Rawls, John (1971). [http://books.google.com/books?id=kvpby7HtAe0C&pg=PA1 ''A Theory of Justice'']. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-00078-0
AnnotationsEdit
Bibliography entries may be annotated to provide additional relevance and explanation of the work.[5] Annotations should be indented (by adding a colon in front) and cited with a reliable source.
CategoriesEdit
Bibliographies within Wikipedia should be added to one or more of the following categories (including many sub-categories):
To display all subcategories click on the "►": |
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ArticlesEdit
Recognized contentEdit
Featured articlesEdit
Featured listsEdit
- List of Maya Angelou works
- List of works by Chairil Anwar
- Works of John Betjeman
- List of works by John Buchan
- List of works by Leslie Charteris
- Arthur Conan Doyle bibliography
- List of works of William Gibson
- Amir Hamzah bibliography
- List of works by Georgette Heyer
- S. E. Hinton bibliography
- List of works by E. W. Hornung
- List of works by Kwee Tek Hoay
- List of National Treasures of Japan (writings: Japanese books)
- List of works by Dorothy L. Sayers
- List of works by H. Rider Haggard
- List of works by W. Somerset Maugham
- List of works by H. C. McNeile
- George Orwell bibliography
- Edgar Allan Poe bibliography
- List of works by Joseph Priestley
- List of works by Sax Rohmer
- Dan Savage bibliography
- List of scientific publications by Albert Einstein
- P. G. Wodehouse bibliography
Good articlesEdit
Did you know? articlesEdit
- L'Année philologique (2008-08-10)
- List of Maya Angelou works (2008-08-24)
- Bibliotheca universalis (2008-09-24)
- S. E. Hinton bibliography (2008-11-05)
- John Calvin bibliography (2009-02-03)
- Bibliotheca Norvegica (2011-06-13)
- List of works by Rambhadracharya (2011-10-28)
- List of works of J. J. Benítez (2012-06-26)
- Amir Hamzah bibliography (2013-06-26)
- List of works by Chairil Anwar (2013-07-01)
- Bibliography of Swami Vivekananda (2013-07-18)
- List of works by Kwee Tek Hoay (2013-10-18)
- List of works by Georgette Heyer (2015-03-10)
Main page featured articlesEdit
- Astrophysics Data System (2009-06-06)
Main page featured listsEdit
- List of scientific publications by Albert Einstein (2012-03-12)
- George Orwell bibliography (2012-07-16)
- List of works by H. C. McNeile (2013-10-21)
- List of works by E. W. Hornung (2014-07-25)
- Works of John Betjeman (2015-02-13)
- List of works by Sax Rohmer (2015-07-13)
New bibliographiesEdit
Listed below are the 25 newest bibliographies created since this project was launched. Please feel free to list your new bibliographies here (newer articles at the top with date created, please remove articles 26 and above at the same time). Please also make sure that each new bibliography created is put into one of the categories listed above.
- Mexican American bibliography - 2014-04-13
- Bibliography of Mount Rainier National Park - 2012-12-09
- Bibliography of encyclopedias: religion - 2012-11-12
- Bibliography of encyclopedias: geography - 2012-09-28
- Bibliography of encyclopedias: history - 2012-09-28
- Bibliography of encyclopedias: film and television - 2012-09-28
- Bibliography of encyclopedias: business, information and economics - 2012-09-28
- Bibliography of encyclopedias: art and artists - 2012-09-28
- Bibliography of encyclopedias: cuisine - 2012-09-28
- Bibliography of encyclopedias: general biographies - 2012-09-26
- Bibliography of encyclopedias: aviation - 2012-09-26
- Bibliography of encyclopedias: astronomy and astronomers - 2012-09-26
- Bibliography of encyclopedias: architecture and architects - 2012-09-19
- Bibliography of encyclopedias - 2012-09-19
- Bibliography of North Dakota history - 2011-12-24
- Bibliography of Oregon history - 2011-12-21
- Bibliography of Idaho history - 2011-12-13
- Bibliography of Wyoming history - 2011-12-04
- Bibliography of the Lewis and Clark Expedition - 2011-12-03
- Bibliography of U.S. congressional memoirs (U. S. representatives) - 2011-12-02
Reviews and assessmentsEdit
This table is automatically updated by Oleg Alexandrov's WP 1.0 bot.
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TemplatesEdit
Project templateEdit
{{WikiProject Bibliographies}}
WikiProject Bibliographies | (Rated NA-class) | |||||||||||||
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User templateEdit
Template for talk pageEdit
{{stand-alone list}}
This is a stand-alone list that meets list notability criteria. Please only add items that meet the selection criteria established in the lead. |
Requests for article improvementEdit
- {{Dynamic list}} -
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This is an incomplete list that may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
- {{Expand list}} -
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This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
- {{List missing criteria}} -
This list has no precise inclusion criteria as described in the Manual of Style for standalone lists. - {{Notability|lists}} -
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for stand-alone lists.
Alerts and watchlistsEdit
Cleanup listing for this project is available. See also the tool's wiki page and the index of WikiProjects.
- No Article alerts at this time.
Recent ...Edit
Task ForcesEdit
Open tasksEdit
Main tasks in order of priority:
- Recruit members interested in supporting this project (on-going)
- Identify and tag with {{WikiProject Bibliographies}} all stand-alone bibliographies and related lists of publications
- Rename appropriate bibliographic articles to "Bibliography of ..." or "Author bibliography" as needed
- Strengthen leads, inclusion criteria and sourcing per WP:NOTESAL as necessary to improve existing bibliographies
- Add infoboxes to author bibliographies
- Convert malformed entries to proper citation formats
- Add ISBN numbers per MOS:WORKS#ISBNs
- Identify potential new bibliographies and recruit editors to build them
- Add
|attention=yes
to the tag template as needed. - Monitor Category:Bibliographies articles needing attention.
- Monitor the recent changes lists to see which articles are being edited, work collaboratively, and revert vandalism.
- If any bibliographies are listed in Wikipedia:Articles for deletion, add them to Wikipedia:WikiProject Deletion sorting/Bibliographies (see instructions on that page).
ParticipantsEdit
Add your name and interests at the end of the list.
- Mike Cline (talk) - Interested in expanding bibliographies related to Western History
- RockMagnetist (talk) - Interested in scientific bibliographies
- Bduke (talk) - Interested in scientific bibliographies, particularly chemistry ones.
- McMormor (talk) - Interested in bibliographies being used by professors, students and anyone else engaged in research annotated bibliographies WP:USEDU.
- Dirac66 (talk) - Science, primarily chemistry and physics.
- LadyofShalott - scientific bibliographies, selected author bibliographies, possible relationship with WikiProject Libraries (but not certain what that might be)
- Moxy (talk) 15:56, 6 December 2011 (UTC)
- Rjensen (talk) 18:05, 6 December 2011 (UTC)
- Rothbardanswer (talk) - interested in historiography and economic bibliographies with emphasis on the history of thought and classical liberalism.
- Gwillhickers - Interested in Early American / British naval history, history in general and Philately. Bibliographies created/built: 1, 2, 3
- KingJeff1970 (talk) 19:31, 22 November 2014 (UTC) - Interested in working on bibs on Western U.S. history, U.S. political and environmental history.
Further readingEdit
Compiling bibliographies is a major activity of historians and scholars. The following sources provide interesting insights into the creation and use of bibliographies.
- The Chicago Manual of Style (U. of Chicago Press, 16th ed. 2010) ch 14 excerpt and text search
- "Bibliography for Beginners". Independent Online Booksellers Association. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
- "How to Prepare an Annotated Bibliography". Cornell University Library. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
NotesEdit
- ^ "About Oxford Bibliographies Online". Retrieved 2011-10-07.
- ^ University of New Hampshire Library, Milne Angling Collection Selected Highlights, [1]
- ^ Herd, Andrew Dr (2001). The Fly. Ellesmere, Shropshire: Medlar Press. ISBN 1899600191.
- ^ Law, Glenn (1995). A Concise History of Fly Fishing. Birmingham, Alabama: Odysseus Editions. p. 162.
- ^ "Writing an Annotated Bibliography". University of Toronto. Retrieved 2011-10-10.
ResourcesEdit
- Wikipedia:Book sources
- Google book tool Coverts bare url into {{cite book}} format
- List of bibliographic resources
- VIAF:Virtual Internet Authority File
- New General Catalogue of Old Books and Authors
- a.k.a. list of pseudonyms
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