It is called a subtitle.
Yes, because retired in this case is a part of the proper noun. Some styles allow you to not capitalize prepositions and articles, but retired is neither of these.
You only underline a title of a book if it is part of the essay and not the title of the essay. Understand?
The Title & Notes
You don't, unless it is at the start of a sentence, or is part of a title or subtotal on a document or a book.
GlossaryIndex
The Title is the part of the book that tells you the name of the book
Use whatever title you want to -- you are the author! Titles are the least important part of your book.
The title page is the first page of a book.
The title page is the first page of a book.
Twelfth Night, Or What You Will.
The title of Book 3 - Chapter 15 is "The Boiling Rock, Part 2."
The first part is the first part of the book, and the second part is the second part of the book. I think they may stop it when Ron leaves Harry and Hermione.
A book can have any title you want. However, most authors do not use the movie-type titles, like "Harry Potter Two." The second book in the series is called "Harry Potter AND the Chamber of Secrets." The idea of calling something "Part Two," or "Part Three," (or whatever number) comes from the movies.
No it does not but the author has a new book
Yes, because retired in this case is a part of the proper noun. Some styles allow you to not capitalize prepositions and articles, but retired is neither of these.
You only underline a title of a book if it is part of the essay and not the title of the essay. Understand?
A title of a book I read was called "Docter". So basically, the title also means the word, which could be counted as a name.