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APA Citation Guide (7th edition) CGS

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Book Review From Library Database (No Title)

Author of Review's Last Name, First Initial. (Year of Publication). [Review of the book  Title of Book: Subtitle if Any , by Book Author's First Initial. Second Initial if Given Last Name].  Name of Journal ,  Volume Number (Issue Number), first page number-last page number. https://doi.org/DOI-number  (if given)

For more information on how to cite Book Reviews in APA 7, refer to pages 334-335 of the Publication Manual of the APA located at the circulation desk.

Book Review from a Website (with Title)

Author of Review's Last Name, First Initial. (Year of Publication). Title of Review. [Review of the book  Title of Book: Subtitle if Any , by Book Author's First Initial. Second Initial if Given Last Name].  Title of Website , URL

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APA Citation Guide (7th edition) : Book Reviews

  • What Kind of Source Is This?
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On This Page

Book review from library database (no title), book review from a website (with title).

Hanging Indents:

All citations should be double spaced and have a hanging indent in a Reference List.

A "hanging indent" means that each subsequent line after the first line of your citation should be indented by 0.5 inches.

Hyperlinks:

Both blue underlined (live) hyperlinks and black without underlining are both acceptable.

All hyperlinks must include https://

Do not put a period after DOIs or hyperlinks.

Author of Review's Last Name, First Initial. (Year of Publication). [Review of the book  Title of Book: Subtitle if Any , by Book Author's First Initial. Second Initial if Given Last Name].  Name of Journal , Volume Number (Issue Number), first page number-last page number. https://doi number if given

For more information on how to cite Book Reviews in APA 7, refer to pages 334-335 of the Publication Manual of the APA located at the circulation desk.

Author of Review's Last Name, First Initial. (Year of Publication). Title of Review. [Review of the book  Title of Book: Subtitle if Any , by Book Author's First Initial. Second Initial if Given Last Name]. Title of Website , URL

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APA Citation Guide (7th edition) : Book Reviews

  • Advertisements
  • Books & eBooks
  • Book Reviews
  • Class Notes, Class Lectures and Presentations
  • Encyclopedias & Dictionaries
  • Government Documents
  • Images, Charts, Graphs, Maps & Tables
  • Indigenous Resources
  • Journal Articles
  • Magazine Articles
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  • Personal Communication (Interviews, Emails)
  • Social Media
  • Videos & DVDs
  • When Creating Digital Assignments
  • Works Cited in Another Source
  • Works by the same author with the same year
  • Paraphrasing
  • No author, no date etc
  • Sample Paper
  • Annotated Bibliography

On This Page

Book review from library database (no title).

  • Book Review From Library Database (with Title)

Hanging Indents:

All citations should be double-spaced and have a hanging indent in a Reference list.

A "hanging indent" means that each subsequent line after the first line of your citation should be indented by 0.5 inches.

Hyperlinks:

Both blue underlined (live) hyperlinks and black without underlining are both acceptable.

All hyperlinks must include https://

Do not put a period after DOIs or hyperlinks.

Author of Review's Last Name, First Initial. (Year of Publication). [Review of the book  Title of Book: Subtitle if Any , by Book Author's First Initial. Second Initial if Given Last Name].  Name of Journal , Volume Number (Issue Number), first page number-last page number. DOI Number if Given

For more information on how to cite Book Reviews in APA 7, refer to pages 334-335 of the Publication Manual of the APA.

Book Review from a Website (with Title)

Author of Review's Last Name, First Initial. (Year of Publication). Title of Review. [Review of the book  Title of Book: Subtitle if Any , by Book Author's First Initial. Second Initial if Given Last Name]. Title of Website , URL

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  • Writing Tips

How to Cite a Review in APA Referencing

2-minute read

  • 8th November 2020

Reviews of books, films, and other media can be great sources in academic writing. But how do you cite a review using APA referencing ? In this post, we explain the basics of citations and the reference list entry.

In-Text Citations for a Review in APA Style

Citations for a review in APA referencing are similar to those for other sources. This means you cite the reviewer’s surname and year of publication:

One review was especially scathing (Smith, 2001).

In addition, if you quote a print source, make sure to cite a page number:

Smith (2001) dismisses the argument as “puerile” (p. 16).

For more on APA citations, see our blog post on the topic .

Reviews in an APA Reference List

The format for a review in an APA reference list will depend on where it was published. For instance, for a review published in a newspaper, you would cite it as a newspaper article . But for a review published on a blog or website, you would cite it as a blog post or website instead.

Find this useful?

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In all cases, though, you will need to adapt the format by adding details of the thing being reviewed in square brackets after the review title.

You can see APA-style references for reviews from an academic journal and a website below, complete with this extra information:

Smith, G. (2001). A backward step for applied ethics [Review of the book Righteous Thought, Righteous Action , by X. Morrison]. Journal of Applied Philosophy , 18(1), 16–24.

Bert, E. (2018). Neil Breen outdoes himself again [Review of the film Twisted Pair , by N. Breen, Dir.]. BadMovieCentral. http://www.badmoviecentral.com/reviews/twisted-pair/

This ensures the reader can identify both the review you’re citing and the thing being reviewed from the reference list entry alone.

Expert APA Proofreading

To make sure your references are all in order, as well as the rest of your academic writing, check out our free online APA guide . You might also want to get your work proofread by one of our APA experts. Learn more about our APA proofreading services here.

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APA Style 7th Edition

  • Advertisements
  • Books & eBooks
  • Book Reviews
  • Class Notes, Class Lectures and Presentations
  • Encyclopedias & Dictionaries
  • Government Documents
  • Images, Charts, Graphs, Maps & Tables
  • Journal Articles
  • Magazine Articles
  • Newspaper Articles
  • Personal Communication (Interviews & Emails)
  • Social Media
  • Videos & DVDs
  • What is a DOI?
  • When Creating Digital Assignments
  • When Information is Missing
  • Works Cited in Another Source
  • In-Text Citation Components
  • Paraphrasing
  • Paper Formatting
  • Citation Basics
  • Reference List and Sample Papers
  • Annotated Bibliography
  • Academic Writer
  • Plagiarism & Citations

Hanging Indents:

All citations should be double spaced and have a hanging indent in a Reference List.

A "hanging indent" means that each subsequent line after the first line of your citation should be indented by 0.5 inches.

Hyperlinks:

Both blue underlined (live) hyperlinks and black without underlining are both acceptable.

All hyperlinks must include https://

Do not put a period after DOIs or hyperlinks.

Book Review from Library Database (No Title)

Author of Review's Last Name, First Initial. (Year of Publication). [Review of the book  Title of Book: Subtitle if Any , by Book Author's First Initial. Second Initial if Given Last Name].  Name of Journal ,  Volume Number (Issue Number), first page number-last page number. DOI Number if Given

For more information on how to cite Book Reviews in APA 7, refer to pages 334-335 in the APA Publication Manual. 

Book Review from a Website (with Title)

Author of Review's Last Name, First Initial. (Year of Publication). Title of Review. [Review of the book  Title of Book: Subtitle if Any , by Book Author's First Initial. Second Initial if Given Last Name].  Title of Website , URL

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reference a book review in apa

APA Citation Guide (7th edition): Book Reviews

  • Advertisements
  • Books & eBooks
  • Book Reviews
  • Class Notes, Class Lectures and Presentations
  • Encyclopedias & Dictionaries
  • Government Documents
  • Images, Charts, Graphs, Maps & Tables
  • Journal Articles
  • Magazine Articles
  • Newspaper Articles
  • Personal Communication (Interviews, Emails)
  • Social Media
  • Videos & DVDs
  • When Creating Digital Assignments
  • When Information Is Missing
  • Works Cited in Another Source
  • Cite Indigenous Knowledge
  • Paraphrasing
  • Reference List & Sample Paper
  • Annotated Bibliography

On This Page

Book review from library database (no title).

  • Book Review From Library Database (with Title)

Hanging Indents:

All citations should be double spaced and have a hanging indent in a Reference List.

A "hanging indent" means that each subsequent line after the first line of your citation should be indented by 0.5 inches.

Hyperlinks:

Both blue underlined (live) hyperlinks and black without underlining are both acceptable.

All hyperlinks must include https://

Do not put a period after DOIs or hyperlinks.

Author of Review's Last Name, First Initial. (Year of Publication). [Review of the book  Title of Book: Subtitle if Any , by Book Author's First Initial. Second Initial if Given Last Name].  Name of Journal , Volume Number (Issue Number), first page number-last page number. DOI Number if Given

For more information on how to cite Book Reviews in APA 7, refer to pages 334-335 of the Publication Manual of the APA located at the circulation desk.

Book Review from a Website (with Title)

Author of Review's Last Name, First Initial. (Year of Publication). Title of Review. [Review of the book  Title of Book: Subtitle if Any , by Book Author's First Initial. Second Initial if Given Last Name]. Title of Website , URL

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APA Citations (7th ed.)

  • General Formatting
  • Professional Paper Elements - Title Page
  • Student Paper Elements - Title Page
  • In-text Citation Basics
  • In-text Citation Author Rules
  • Citing Multiple Works
  • Personal Communications
  • Classroom or Intranet Resources
  • Secondary Sources
  • Periodicals
  • Books and Reference Works
  • Edited Book Chapters and Entries in Reference Works
  • Reports and Gray Literature
  • Conference Sessions and Presentations
  • Dissertations and Theses
  • Data Sets and Software
  • Tests, Scales, & Inventories
  • Audiovisual Works
  • Audio Works
  • Visual Works
  • Social Media
  • Webpages & Websites
  • Basics & Formatting
  • Avoiding Plagiarism

Reviews of books, films, TV shows, albums, and other entertainment are published in a variety of outlets, including journals, magazines, newspapers, websites, and blogs.

The reference format for a review should be the same as the format for the type of content appearing within that source, with the addition of information about the item being reviewed in square brackets after the review title.

Within square brackets, write "Review of the" and then the type of work being reviewed (e.g., film, book, TV series episode, video game); its title; and its author or editor, director, writer, and so forth, with a designation of role for all except regular authors of books.

See pp. 334-335 of the manual for more information.

Reviews Template

reference a book review in apa

Film Review Published in a Journal

Copeland, K. J. (2018). Film review [Review of the film  Moonlight , by B. Jenkins, Dir.].  Journal of Homosexuality, 65 (5), 687-689. https://doi.org/10.1080/00918369.2017.1333815

Parenthetical citation:  (Copeland, 2018)

Narrative citation:  Copeland (2018)

Book Review Published in a Newspaper

El-Mohtar, A. (2019, December 27). A poltergeist who adores apricots and cat-loving A.I. [Review of the book  Queen of the conquered , by K. Callender].  The New York Times . https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/27/books/review/otherworldly-catfishing-catnet-queen-conquered.html

Parenthetical citation:  (El-Mohtar, 2019)

Narrative citation:  El-Mohtar (2019)

TV Series Episode Review Published on a Website

Siede, C. (2020, January 5).  Doctor Who  embraces the past and resets its future [Review of the TV series episdoe "Spyfall, part two," by C. Chibnall, Writer, & L. H. Jones, Dir.]. A.V. Club. https://tv.avclub.com/doctor-who-embraces-the-past-and-resets-its-future-1840818048

Parenthetical citation:  (Siede, 2020)

Narrative citation:  Siede (2020)

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APA (7th ed.) referencing guide (Online): Book review in a journal or newspaper

  • Paraphrasing
  • Direct quotes
  • Secondary Referencing
  • More than one work cited
  • Author with two or more works cited in the same year
  • Personal Communication
  • In-text citations

Reference list

  • Referencing Tools
  • Books with one author
  • Books with two authors
  • Books with three or more authors
  • Edited book
  • Chapter in an edited book
  • Anthologies and Collected Works
  • Critical Editions
  • Multivolume work
  • Religious and classical Works
  • Thesis / Dissertation
  • Translation
  • Work within an Anthology
  • Conference Paper
  • Journal article with one author
  • Journal article with two authors
  • Journal articles with three or more authors
  • Journal article with no identified author/anonymous author
  • Newspaper articles
  • Magazine articles

Book review in a journal or newspaper

  • Act of Parliament
  • Law report (case law)
  • Business Reports
  • Statistics & Datasets
  • Government reports
  • YouTube/online videos
  • Episode of a TV Show
  • Radio Broadcast

Below you will find guidance and examples of how to set out a reference to a book review in a journal or a newspaper in the body of your work and in the reference list at the end.

In text citations

According to Nagorski (2013)... OR ...(Nagorski, 2013).

Book review in a journal

Last name of reviewer, Initial(s). (Year). Title of review [Review of the book  Title of book,  by name of book's author].  Journal Title,  Volume number in italics (issue or part number), page numbers. DOI

Nagorski, A. (2013). The totalitarian temptation [Review of the book  The devil in history: communism, fascism and some lessons of the 20th century,  by V. Tismaneanu].  Foreign Affairs, 92 (1), 172-176. 

Book review in a newspaper

Last name of reviewer, Initial(s). (Year, Month Date). Title of review [Review of the book  Title of book,  by name of book's author].  Name of Newspaper. URL

Santos, F. (2019, January 11). Reframing refugee children's stories [Review of the book We are displaced: My journey and stories from refugee girls around the world , by M. Yousafzai]. The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/2Hlgjk3

If the review is untitled, place the material in square brackets immediately after the year. Retain the brackets to indicate that this is a description of the form and content, not the review's title.

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APA 7th Edition Citation Examples

  • Volume and Issue Numbers
  • Page Numbers
  • Undated Sources
  • Citing a Source Within a Source
  • In-Text Citations
  • Academic Journals
  • Encyclopedia Articles
  • Book, Film, and Product Reviews

Format for book, film, and product reviews

Library database.

  • Online Classroom Materials
  • Conference Papers
  • Technical + Research Reports
  • Court Decisions
  • Treaties and Other International Agreements
  • Federal Regulations: I. The Code of Federal Regulations
  • Federal Regulations: II. The Federal Register
  • Executive Orders
  • Charter of the United Nations
  • Federal Statutes
  • Dissertations and Theses
  • Interviews, E-mail Messages + Other Personal Communications
  • Social Media
  • Business Sources
  • PowerPoints
  • AI: ChatGPT, etc.

Author last name, first initial. (Date). Article title. [Review of the book/film/product  Book/film/product title ].  Journal Title, volume (issue), page numbers. URL  

  • Author:  List the last name, followed by the first initial (and second initial). See  Authors  for more information.
  • Date:  List the date between parentheses, followed by a period.
  • Article title:  Capitalize the first word of the title, subtitle, and proper nouns, followed by a period.
  • Review of: Include words "Review of the [book/film/product]" before title. Italicize the title. Capitalize the first word of the title, subtitle, and proper nouns, followed by a period.
  • Journal title:  In italics. Capitalize all important words.
  • Volume and issue number:  Volume number in italics. Issue number in parentheses, no italics.
  • Page number(s):  If from a database, list page numbers followed by a period.
  • URL:  If from the free web, use a URL. 

See specific examples below.

A titled book, film, or product review:

Grimes, W. (2006, December 13). Beyond Mandalay, the road to isolation and xenophobia [Review of the book The river of lost footsteps: Histories of Burma, by T. Myint-U]. New York Times , pp. E8, E10.

An untitled book, film, or product review (for example, a review covering multiple works):

Guha, M. (2006). [Review of the books Fleeting pleasures: A history of intoxicants, by M. London and Dirty: A search for answers inside America's teenage drug epidemic , by M. Maran]. Journal of Mental Health, 15 , 713-716. http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=t713432595

Follow the correct formatting for the type of publication (e.g. a newspaper, a scholarly journal) the review is taken from, including the DOI if one is available.

Cohen, P. (2007, May 9). Love, honor, cherish, and buy [Review of the book One perfect day: The selling of the American wedding, by R. Mead]. New York Times . http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/09/books/09bride.html

See  Publication Manual , 10.7.

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Home / Guides / Citation Guides / APA Format / APA Book Citation

How to Cite a Book in APA

Book – A written work or composition that has been published – typically printed on pages bound together.

Understanding how to cite books will provide you with the basis for citation conventions in APA style. Books are key components of many papers and are often an invaluable resource, so this guide will show you how to format reference page citations and in-text citations for APA 7th edition.

Citing a book in which the chapters are written by different authors is a little more involved than citing other types of books. You will find information on this type of book in this guide, but you can find also find more in-depth information here, in the article How to Cite a Chapter in a Book APA . That article is also helpful for in-text citations that include page numbers.

Guide Overview

What you need.

  • Citing a book (print)
  • Citing an E-book (online or digital book)
  • Citing a book (found in a database)
  • Citing an audiobook
  • Citing a book with an editor credited on the cover
  • Citing an edited book

Troubleshooting

In APA, a basic book citation includes the following information:

  • Author’s name
  • Title of the book
  • Publisher of the book
  • Year published

Additional information is needed when citing:

  • DOI or stable URL if available
  • Name of the translator or editor
  • Title of the translator or editor (trans. or ed. respectively)
  • Name of the chapter author
  • Name of the chapter
  • Name of the book editor or author
  • Page numbers or ranges used
  • Volume numbers and/or edition numbers
  • New edition number
  • Name of forward or introduction author if applicable
  • Original publication date

Citing a book in APA (print)

View Screenshot

Note: Capitalize the first letter of the first word of the title and any subtitles (the first word that follows a colon), as well as the first letter of any proper nouns. See our APA Citation Basics guide or the APA Publication Manual for more information.

Citing an E-book in APA (online or digital book)

An e-book is considered a written work or composition that has been digitized and is readable through computers or e-readers (Kindles, iPads,nooks etc.). As of the APA 7th edition, a special notation does not need to be made for e-reader versions. Simply include the book’s URL or DOI number at the end of the citation. However, if you’re citing an audiobook, scroll down this page to see the different citation structure for audiobooks.

Citing a book in APA (found in a database)

Some e-books may be available online through your library’s databases or catalogs. According to the 7th edition of APA style, most books found via academic databases do not need to include the database name or link in the citation. This is because these books are usually widely available in many place and resources.

Citing an audio book in APA

An audiobook is a book that has been converted into audio files or an audio format. They are also sometimes called “books on tape.”

Citing a book with an author and an editor

Citing an edited book (no single author credited).

reference a book review in apa

Here is a video that reviews book citations in APA style:

Solution #1: How to cite a book in another language

Books written in another language should contain the translation in brackets next to the title. If the language contains characters that are different from the Roman alphabet, transliterate the alphabet into the Roman alphabet for your citation.

Author’s last name, F. M. (Year). Title of the book in original language [Translated title]. Publisher.

Sanchez, E. (2018).  Yo no soy tu perfecta hija Mexicana  [I am not your perfect Mexican daughter]. Vintage Espanol.

Solution #2: How to cite a republished translated book

For translated books, include the name of the original author at the start of the citation, but for the year, include the date of publication for the version you are using. After the title, include the translator’s name, and after the publisher, provide the original publication date. For in-text citation, two dates are required. Write the date of the original publication first, then add a slash followed by the current version that you are using.

Reference page structure:

Author’s last name, F. M. (Year). Title of the work (Translator’s F. Last name, Trans.; Edition number ed.). Publisher. (Original work published Year)

Reference page example:

Freud, S. (1950). Beyond the pleasure principle (J. Strachey, Trans., 2nd ed.). Liveright. (Original work published 1920)

In-text citation structure:

Parenthetical structure: (Author last name, date of original publication/date of current version) Narrative structure: Author last name (date of original publication/date of current version)

In-text citation example:

                  Parenthetical example: (Freud, 1920/1950)

        Narrative example: Freud (1920/1950)

Solution #3: How to cite an ancient Greek or Roman work

Much like translated versions, include the original date of publication after the publisher (or DOI link). However, for ancient texts, be sure to include “ca.” (which stands for “circa”) with the date, followed by B.C.E. or C.E. For the in-text citation, you will also need to include ca. and B.C.E. or C.E. after the author’s name, followed by the date of the current version.

Author’s last name, F. M. (Year). Title of the work (Translator’s F. Last name, Trans.; Edition number ed.). Publisher. (Original work published ca. date)

Homer. (1990). The odyssey (R. Fitzgerald, Trans.). Vintage Books. (Original work published ca. 8 B.C.E.)

Parenthetical structure: Author last name, original date of the work/current version date

                     Narrative structure: Author last name (original date of the work/current version date)

                   Parenthetical example: (Homer, ca. 8 B.C.E./1990)

Narrative example: Homer (ca. 8 B.C.E./1990)

APA Formatting Guide

APA Formatting

  • Annotated Bibliography
  • Block Quotes
  • et al Usage
  • In-text Citations
  • Multiple Authors
  • Paraphrasing
  • Page Numbers
  • Parenthetical Citations
  • Reference Page
  • Sample Paper
  • APA 7 Updates
  • View APA Guide

Citation Examples

  • Book Chapter
  • Journal Article
  • Magazine Article
  • Newspaper Article
  • Website (no author)
  • View all APA Examples

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To cite a book in APA style, you need to have basic information including the authors, publication year, book title, and publisher. The templates for in-text citation and reference list entry of a book written by a single author along with examples are given below:

In-text citation template and example:

Author Surname (Publication Year)

Dean (2010)

Parenthetical

(Author Surname, Publication Year)

(Dean, 2010)

Reference list entry template and example:

Author Surname, F. M. (Publication Year). Book title: Subtitle of the book . Publisher Name.

Dean, J. (2010). Blog theory: Feedback and capture in the circuits of drive . Polity Press.

Set the book title in italics and sentence case. Capitalize the first word after a colon. If an edition number is given, place it after the title in parenthesis. The style should be, for example, (2nd ed.).

To cite a book chapter with multiple authors in APA style, you need to have basic information including the names of the authors, publication year, chapter title, editors, publisher, and place of publication. The templates for in-text citation and reference list entry of a book chapter along with examples are given below:

When the source has 3–20 authors

In the text, use the first author’s surname followed by “et al.”

First Author Surname et al. (Publication Year)

Rong et al. (2017)

(Author Surname et al., Publication Year)

(Rong et al., 2017)

List the names of all authors in the reference list. Use “&” before the last author’s name. The book title is set in italics. The word “In” is used before the editor’s name. Note that the style for setting the editors’ names is the initial of the first name (and if applicable, the middle name) followed by the surname. Use “(Eds.)” after the editors’ name. Do not include the publisher’s location in the reference. The example below is for three author names.

Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F.M., &  Author Surname, F.M. (Publication Year). Chapter title: Subtitle. In F. Editor1 & F. Editor2 (Eds.), Book title (pp. #–#). Publisher Name.

Rong, X. L., Hilburn, J., & Sun, W. (2017). Immigration, demographic changes, and schools in North Carolina from 1990 to 2015. In X. Rong & J. Hilburn (Eds.), Immigration and education in North Carolina (pp. 1–24). Sense.

When the source has more than 20 authors

In the text, use the first author’s surname followed by et al.

Alvarez et al. (2019)

(Alvarez et al., 2019)

List the first 19 author’s names in the reference list followed by an ellipsis. Then add the last author’s name.

Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., Author Surname, F. M., . . . Author Surname, F. M. (Publication Year). Chapter title: Subtitle. In F. Editor1 & F. Editor2 (Eds.), Book title (pp. #–#). Publisher Name.

Alvarez, L. D., Peach, J. L., Rodriguez, J. F., Donald, L., Thomas, M., Aruck, A., Samy, K., Anthony, K., Ajey, M., Rodriguez, K. L., Katherine, K., Vincent, A., Pater, F., Somu, P., Pander, L., Berd, R., Fox, L., Anders, A., Kamala, W., . . . Nicole Jones, K. (2019). Unsung psychology pioneers: A content analysis of who makes history (and who doesn’t). In R. Lerner & W. Overton (Eds.), The handbook of life-span development (pp. 509–553). Wiley.

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Purdue Online Writing Lab Purdue OWL® College of Liberal Arts

Reference List: Books

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Welcome to the Purdue OWL

This page is brought to you by the OWL at Purdue University. When printing this page, you must include the entire legal notice.

Copyright ©1995-2018 by The Writing Lab & The OWL at Purdue and Purdue University. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, reproduced, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without permission. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our terms and conditions of fair use.

Note:  This page reflects the latest version of the APA Publication Manual (i.e., APA 7), which released in October 2019. The equivalent resource for the older APA 6 style  can be found here .

The following contains a list of the most commonly cited print book sources. E-books are described on our "Electronic Sources" page . For a complete list of how to cite print sources, please refer to the 7 th edition of the APA Publication Manual. 

Note: If available, APA 7 requires a DOI for all works that have one — whether print or digital. If a print work does not have a DOI do not include it in the reference citation.

Basic Format for Books

Author, A. A. (Year of publication). Title of work: Capital letter also for subtitle . Publisher Name. DOI (if available)

Stoneman, R. (2008). Alexander the Great: A life in legend . Yale University Press.

Edited Book, No Author

Editor, E. E. (Ed.). (Year of publication). Title of work: Capital letter also for subtitle . Publisher. DOI (if available)

Leitch, M. G., & Rushton, C. J. (Eds.). (2019).  A new companion to Malory . D. S. Brewer.

Edited Book with an Author or Authors

Author, A. A. (Year of publication). Title of work: Capital letter also for subtitle (E. Editor, Ed.). Publisher. DOI (if available)

Malory, T. (2017). Le morte darthur (P. J. C. Field, Ed.). D. S. Brewer. (Original work published 1469-70)

A Translation

Author, A. A. (Year of publication). Title of work: Capital letter also for subtitle (T. Translator, Trans.). Publisher. (Original work published YEAR) DOI (if available)

Plato (1989). Symposium (A. Nehamas & P. Woodruff, Trans.). Hackett Publishing Company. (Original work published ca. 385-378 BCE)

Note : When you cite a republished work, like the one above, in your text, it should appear with both dates: Plato (385-378/1989)

Edition Other Than the First

Author, A. A. (Year of publication). Title of work: Capital letter also for subtitle (# edition). Publisher. DOI (if available)

Belcher, W. (2019). Writing your journal article in twelve weeks: A guide to academic publishing success (2nd ed.). University of Chicago Press.

Article or Chapter in an Edited Book

Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Year of publication). Title of chapter. In E. E. Editor & F. F. Editor (Eds.), Title of work: Capital letter also for subtitle (pp. pages of chapter). Publisher. DOI (if available)

Note : When you list the pages of the chapter or essay in parentheses after the book title, use "pp." before the numbers: (pp. 1-21). This abbreviation, however, does not appear before the page numbers in periodical references. List any edition number in the same set of parentheses as the page numbers, separated by a comma: (2nd ed., pp. 66-72).

Armstrong, D. (2019). Malory and character. In M. G. Leitch & C. J. Rushton (Eds.), A new companion to Malory  (pp. 144-163). D. S. Brewer.

Multivolume Work

Author, A. A. (Year of publication). Title of work: Capital letter also for subtitle (Vol. #) . Publisher. DOI (if available)

David, A., & Simpson, J. (Eds.). (2006). The Norton anthology of English literature: The Middle Ages (8 th ed.,Vol. A). W. W. Norton and Company.

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Book Review | ‘The Manicurist’s Daughter: A Memoir’ by Susan Lieu

An Immigrant Story Is Just One Strand of This Satisfying Read

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reference a book review in apa

Several years after the fall of Saigon, Susan Lieu’s parents fled Vietnam to escape suffocating Communist rule. Leaving was an enormous risk filled with uncertainty, a blind leap into the unknown. The overcrowded boat bound for Malaysia might flounder in a storm or be commandeered by Thai pirates. If the boat’s engine failed, the passengers might perish of starvation or dehydration. That the Lieu family made it to Malaysia, then Indonesia, then Singapore, and finally to America after being granted asylum status was as much a matter of luck as grim determination.

The Manicurist’s Daughter is in one sense a quintessential immigrant story of pluck, family, and striving. After the Lieus landed in the San Francisco Bay, the family’s fortunes were driven by Susan’s mother, known as Ma, a human dynamo. Ma opened a nail salon in the East Bay and used this enterprise to sponsor her siblings and other relatives; at one point, the extended family numbered 13. Everybody worked in the salon, seven days a week, with very few days off each year. Before long, the family purchased a home and opened a second salon. Susan’s older brother went to Stanford while Susan graduated from Harvard. Had the story ended there, it would be remarkable.

But the immigrant success story is only one strand in this rich memoir.

As a young person in war-ravaged Vietnam, the thought of eating meat every day of the week was something Ma dreamed about, abundant food being a measure of wealth and security. For the Lieu clan, preparing and eating food was an essential ritual, more than a means of sustaining laboring bodies; it was how they preserved their extended familial bonds and cultural identity. Many of Susan’s recollections of her mother are associated with meals, favorite dishes, and particular smells and textures; the memoir contains dozens of references to food.

But food also became Susan’s nemesis. In her early days at Harvard, she was lonely and isolated and ate for comfort, gaining unwanted pounds she knew would expose her to ridicule when she saw her family again. Susan internalized the verbal arrows and put-downs from her father, siblings, and grandmother; her blood relatives were more judgmental than complete strangers.

In one poignant example of this dynamic, Susan recalls the day she told her father, Ba, of her acceptance to Harvard. Expecting Ba to be thrilled, she is instead crushed when he asks her why she didn’t get into Stanford.

At the age of 36, Ma decided to do something for herself: a bit of cosmetic surgery, sculpting around the nose along with a tummy tuck. Ma scheduled the procedure with a surgeon who advertised in Vietnamese newspapers. Unbeknownst to Ma or her family, this surgeon carried no malpractice insurance and was practicing under a cloud of formal complaints and inquiries. What was supposed to be a routine procedure took a wrong turn, and Ma wound up in a coma with no chance of coming out of it; her eldest son — a teenager at the time — made the decision to end life support. Susan was 11 years old. Ba was 42 and suddenly responsible for four children and a business he wasn’t equipped to manage.

While the memoir is primarily centered on Susan’s determined search for her mother, it’s also an investigation into why Ma sought plastic surgery in the first place, and the many ways her death affected the Lieu family. But Susan is the only person willing to talk about what happened to Ma, to probe and process her death from as many angles as possible, and this realization reinforces her feeling of being the hysterical youngest child. Her brothers and sister follow Ba’s example, which is to change the subject or retreat into silence. Why bring up what can’t be changed? Susan describes reading through deposition transcripts, seeking details her father and older siblings forgot or didn’t speak about. Driven to leave no avenue unexamined, she even consults a medium.

While Susan is searching for information about her mother, she’s also trying to find her place in the business world, torn between family expectations of career success and her own artistic aspirations. In the process of creating her one-woman theatrical show titled 140 LBS , Susan comes to understand how differently each person within a family can experience grief. Her siblings, aunts, and Ba didn’t suffer any less; quiet suffering is still painful and traumatic.

Lieu is brave and vulnerable, willing to expose her deepest feelings and fears, and some embarrassing missteps. Like every human story, this one contains numerous layers. As the layers in The Manicurist’s Daughter are peeled back, a remarkable mother and her equally remarkable daughter are revealed.

This review originally appeared in the California Review of Books .

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  1. Reviews and Peer Commentary APA Citations

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  2. How to Cite a Book Chapter in APA: 10 Steps (with Pictures)

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  3. General rules: Reference list

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  4. 8 APA Book Reference Examples

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COMMENTS

  1. Book Reviews

    For more information on how to cite Book Reviews in APA 7, refer to pages 334-335 of the Publication Manual of the APA located at the circulation desk. Book Review from a Website (with Title) Author of Review's Last Name, First Initial.

  2. How do you reference a book review? (6th edition)

    If the review is untitled, use the material in brackets as the title; retain the brackets to indicate that the material is a description of form and content, not a title. Identify the type of medium being reviewed in brackets (book, motion picture, television program, etc.).

  3. LibGuides: APA Citation Guide (7th edition) : Book Reviews

    In-Text Citation Example. (Author's Last Name, Year of Publication, Page Number) Example: (McKinley, 2018, p. 83) For more information on how to cite Book Reviews in APA 7, refer to pages 334-335 of the Publication Manual of the APA located at the circulation desk.

  4. Subject Guides: APA Citation Style (7th Edition): Book Reviews

    For example, a book review in a journal follows the same format as an article in a journal, except that it also includes information about the book being reviewed. This page lists examples on how to cite book reviews. For examples of more types of reviews (films, TV shows, video games, etc.), see the APA Publication Manual, pp. 334-335.

  5. How to Cite a Book Review in APA Referencing

    To write an in-text citation for a book review, follow the author-date method, using the author of the book review and the date of publication. A parenthetical in-text citation will include the reviewer's last name and the year of publication in parentheses following the information requiring a citation. For example:

  6. APA Citation Guide (7th edition) : Book Reviews

    McKinley, A. (2018). [Review of the book Criminal investigative failures, by D. K. Rossmo]. Salus Journal, 6 (1), 82-84. In-Text Citation Example. (Author's Last Name, Year of Publication, Page Number) Example: (McKinley, 2018, p. 83) For more information on how to cite Book Reviews in APA 7, refer to pages 334-335 of the Publication Manual of ...

  7. How to Cite a Review in APA Referencing

    Citations for a review in APA referencing are similar to those for other sources. This means you cite the reviewer's surname and year of publication: One review was especially scathing (Smith, 2001). In addition, if you quote a print source, make sure to cite a page number: Smith (2001) dismisses the argument as "puerile" (p. 16).

  8. Book Reviews

    Salus Journal , 6 (1), 82-84. In-Text Citation Example. (Author's Last Name, Year of Publication, Page Number) Example: (McKinley, 2018, p. 83) For more information on how to cite Book Reviews in APA 7, refer to pages 334-335 in the APA Publication Manual.

  9. BU Library: APA Citation Guide (7th edition): Book Reviews

    Salus Journal, 6 (1), 82-84. In-Text Citation Example. (Author's Last Name, Year of Publication, Page Number) Example: (McKinley, 2018, p. 83) For more information on how to cite Book Reviews in APA 7, refer to pages 334-335 of the Publication Manual of the APA located at the circulation desk.

  10. PDF APA Style Reference Guide for Journal Articles, Books, and Edited Book

    Provide the title of the book in which the chapter appears. Capitalize only the first letter of the first word. For a two-part title, capitalize the first word of the second part of the title. Also capitalize proper nouns. Italicize the book title. Include the chapter page range. End with a period.

  11. Reviews

    Reviews. Reviews of books, films, TV shows, albums, and other entertainment are published in a variety of outlets, including journals, magazines, newspapers, websites, and blogs. The reference format for a review should be the same as the format for the type of content appearing within that source, with the addition of information about the ...

  12. Reviews and Peer Commentary APA Citations

    The proper APA 7 citation format when referencing a review is as follows: Format for a Review Citation in APA. Reviewer, R. R. (Date). Title of review [Review of the media Title, by A. A. Author]. Title of complete work, xx, xxx-xxx. Include the medium, such as book or movie, inside the brackets.

  13. APA (7th ed.) referencing guide (Online): Book review in a journal or

    The totalitarian temptation [Review of the book The devil in history: communism, fascism and some lessons of the 20th century, by V. Tismaneanu]. Foreign Affairs, 92(1), 172-176. Book review in a newspaper. Last name of reviewer, Initial(s). (Year, Month Date). Title of review [Review of the book Title of book, by name of book's author].

  14. Book, Film, and Product Reviews

    A titled book, film, or product review: Grimes, W. (2006, December 13). Beyond Mandalay, the road to isolation and xenophobia [Review of the book The river of lost footsteps: Histories of Burma, by T. Myint-U].New York Times, pp. E8, E10.. An untitled book, film, or product review (for example, a review covering multiple works):

  15. Book/ebook references

    Book/Ebook References. Use the same formats for both print books and ebooks. For ebooks, the format, platform, or device (e.g., Kindle) is not included in the reference. This page contains reference examples for books, including the following: Whole authored book. Whole edited book. Republished book, with editor.

  16. Quick Answers—References (6th edition)

    The reference list entry for an e-book includes the author, date, title, and source (URL or DOI). For a chapter in an e-book, include the chapter title and page numbers (if available). ... The in-text citation includes the author and date, as with any other APA Style citation. More information. Publication Manual (6th ed., section 7.02, pp. 202 ...

  17. How to Cite a Book in APA Style

    In the reference list, start with the author's last name and initials, followed by the year. The book title is written in sentence case (only capitalize the first word and any proper nouns ). Include any other contributors (e.g. editors and translators) and the edition if specified (e.g. "2nd ed."). APA format. Last name, Initials.

  18. How to Cite a Book in APA

    Solution #2: How to cite a republished translated book. For translated books, include the name of the original author at the start of the citation, but for the year, include the date of publication for the version you are using. After the title, include the translator's name, and after the publisher, provide the original publication date.

  19. APA Formatting and Style Guide (7th Edition)

    Basic guidelines for formatting the reference list at the end of a standard APA research paper Author/Authors Rules for handling works by a single author or multiple authors that apply to all APA-style references in your reference list, regardless of the type of work (book, article, electronic resource, etc.)

  20. Citing a Review in APA

    Don't let plagiarism errors spoil your paper. Scan your paper for plagiarism mistakes. Get help for 7,000+ citation styles including APA 7. Check for 400+ advanced grammar errors. Create in-text citations and save them. Free 3-day trial. Cancel anytime.*️. Try Citation Machine® Plus! *See Terms and Conditions.

  21. Reference List: Books

    Cite a book automatically in APA. The following contains a list of the most commonly cited print book sources. E-books are described on our "Electronic Sources" page . For a complete list of how to cite print sources, please refer to the 7 th edition of the APA Publication Manual. Note: If available, APA 7 requires a DOI for all works that have ...

  22. Book Review

    The Manicurist's Daughter is in one sense a quintessential immigrant story of pluck, family, and striving. After the Lieu's landed in the San Francisco Bay, the family's fortunes were driven by Susan's mother, known as Ma, a human dynamo. Ma opened a nail salon in the East Bay and used this enterprise to sponsor her siblings and other ...

  23. References

    References provide the information necessary for readers to identify and retrieve each work cited in the text. Check each reference carefully against the original publication to ensure information is accurate and complete. Accurately prepared references help establish your credibility as a careful researcher and writer. Consistency in reference ...

  24. Distinctiveness and memory.

    Reviews the book, Extraordinary Memories for Exceptional Events by Stephen R. Schmidt (see record 2012-03741-000). In this book, the author attempts to develop a fuller understanding of the role of distinctiveness in memory. The title of the book is arguably misleading in this respect because its subject matter is far narrower than what might be inferred from a book supposedly about ...

  25. Do social media experiments prove a link with mental health: A

    Whether social media influences the mental well-being of users remains controversial. Evidence from correlational and longitudinal studies has been inconsistent, with effect sizes weak at best. However, some commentators are more convinced by experimental studies, wherein experimental groups are asked to refrain from social media use for some length of time, compared to a control group of ...

  26. PDF APA Style and MLA Style References Comparison Guide

    This guide compares APA Style and MLA style references for four common sources: journal articles, books, edited book chapters, and webpages. Format varies depending on the number of authors; the templates match the examples and show variations for one, two, and three or more authors. The sentences with in-text citations are paraphrased, which ...