city of publication, publisher, and date of publication
___
Also the edition if there is more than one. If you have the date of the first edition it should be added in brackets at the end.
Example:
Tawney, R. H. Equality, 2nd ed., George Allen and Unwin, London 1931. (!st ed. 1931)
In a bibliographic citation, information such as the author's middle name or middle initial, the author's biographical details, and the author's email address are typically not required. Additionally, background information on the author or publication context are usually omitted in a standard bibliographic citation.
For a book citation in MLA style, you typically need the author's name, title of the book, publisher, publication year, and the medium of publication (e.g., print or ebook). Additional information may include the edition, volume number, and the city of publication.
You can typically find information about the author of an article on the Poetry Foundation website by looking for a byline at the beginning or end of the article. The byline usually includes the author's name and sometimes additional information about them.
Readers benefit from the author's referencing by being able to verify the information presented, deepen their understanding of the topic through additional sources, and gain credibility and trust in the author's work.
The question requires additional information for it to be accurately answered.
No!
No, "Frankenstein" is not an appositive. An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames or provides additional information about another noun right next to it. For example, in the phrase "Mary Shelley, the author of Frankenstein," "the author of Frankenstein" is an appositive that gives more information about Mary Shelley.
"Why am I reading this article?" "Why did the author write this article?" "Why did the author choose this subject?" "Why did the author include this information?"
There isn't an appositive phrase in that sentence.
To cite a book in text according to the required citation style, you typically include the author's last name and the page number in parentheses at the end of the sentence where the information is used (Author's Last Name, page number).
In a bibliography or works-cited list, you must include the author's name, title of the work, publication date, publisher, and relevant page numbers. Additional information such as the edition, translator, or URL may also be required depending on the citation style.
Additional information about a document refers to contextual details that enhance understanding or provide further insights beyond the main content. This could include metadata such as the author, date of creation, purpose, and version history, as well as related documents, references, or annotations. Such information helps users grasp the significance, relevance, and background of the document, facilitating better interpretation and usage.