The title comes from what you wrote. Finish the book first, then worry about the title.
The title is the last thing you do. Book tiles change all the time while the writing is going on.
No, in APA style, you should not underline the book title in the bibliography. Instead, you should italicize the title of the book.
The title comes from what you have written -- finish writing the book first. Then, worry about finding a title. When you sell it, the publisher is likely to change the title to something they think will sell better anyhow.
It can be anything you want it to be technically. I would include the title of the book in the title of the book. For example: The Glorious Cause By Jeff Shaara could be the title of a book report.
You only underline a title of a book if it is part of the essay and not the title of the essay. Understand?
If you are asking how to properly write the title of a book when you're doing an essay or report, you underline it. If you are asking how to invent a title for your writing, click on the link.
When There Is A Wheel, Then There Is A Way
Writing a book with a catchy title.
I couldn't find any specific book titled "The Reaper is After You." It's possible that there might be books with similar titles or themes, but none with that exact title came up in my search.
In a literary response essay, the title "A Separate Peace" should be italicized, not underlined or in quotations. Italicizing is the preferred way to indicate a title of a book or novel within a piece of writing.
The title of a book should be written with the first letter of all important words, as well as the first word, capitalized, and the entire title underlined. Underline a book title when written by hand and italicize when typed. Example: Lord of Light
In a citation, you should not italicize the title of an article, book, or journal. You should italicize the title of the journal or book, but not the title of the article itself.