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User:Ïvana/sandbox/TFP book template

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ïvana (talk | contribs) at 19:02, 28 June 2024 (added disclaimer in notes). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

name of the book
Authorauthor
Original titleoriginal title, if not in English
Languagelanguage of original book
Publisherpublisher
Publication date
date published (1st edition)
Publication placecountry of original publication
Media typeprint / digital
Pagespages
Awardsawards if any
Websitefor the publisher's or author's website about the book

Name of the book is a «year of publication» «literary genre(s)» book written by «author(s)» and published by «publishing company».

That's the standard first sentence. For the rest of the lead include introductory details about the book (sources should be in the body of the article). Publisher can also be excluded for the lead, but if you don't have much for that section it is a nice addition.

Background

Optional. Depends on the type of book. Makes more sense for non-fiction ones if you wanna go on over what prompted the book's creation. Can also talk about inspiration behind the book, anything that shaped the writer(s) life/experiences that prompted them to write it, what was their research, etc etc. Can include pictures of the author(s) or anything relevant to the subject of the book.

Overview/Contents/Synopsis/Summary

Any of the proposed titles for the heading are fine. General overview of the book.

Reception/Critical reception

Optional. Again, any of the proposed titles are fine. If the book received any awards they could be included here or in a separate Awards section.

See also

Optional. Related Wikipedia articles. If the author has an article it should not be added here; link it in the lead section.

References

Generated automatically.

Further reading

Optional. Can link to related articles, preferably from reliable/non obscure sources.

External links

Optional. Examples: official website of the book, official website of the author(s), author(s) interviews, editorial reviews, book excerpts, etc.

Categories go below the external links with the format [[:Category:«name of category»]] (the ":" is added to disable the categories while the article is still a draft, per WP:DRAFTNOCAT). There are thousands of categories to choose from, and this is an optional parameter. You could search for books related to the same subject and copy the ones used there.



NOTES/OBSERVATIONS:
DO NOT UPDATE THIS TEMPLATE. Click on "Edit" to be able to see the code, and copy/paste whatever you need into the newly created draft. Any non authorized change made here will be reverted.


Content

  • WP:CCPOL - core content policies
  • MOS:LEAD - how the lead section/introduction should be structured
  • MOS:AT - rules for article titles, sections, and headings
  • MOS:LINK - when links should and should not be used, and how to format them
  • MOS:WTW - words to watch
  • WP:NCBOOKS - naming conventions for books
  • WP:CATSPECIFIC - how to categorize a page

Citations

  • WP:CITE - how to properly cite and format sources
  • MOS:CITEPUNCT - rules for refs and adjacent punctuations
  • WP:RSPSS - list of sources with their status (reliable, deprecated, biased etc)
  • WP:SOURCE - what counts as a reliable source
  • WP:QUESTIONABLE - how to identify questionable sources
  • WP:OWNWORDS - copyright guidelines when using sources

Useful templates

Additional comments

If the author of the book has an article, link their name to it in the lead and optionally the first mention after that. In the lead section you should also include their nationality and maybe occupation, if known. You can use sources already present in the author's article. Sometimes one of the references will refer to this book and could also be used here.

The lead section doesn't need to contain any references as long as that content is referenced in the body of the article.

If the author has books with their own WP page, you can check them out and draw inspiration from them. See what categories they're using, what information about the author they include, what are the external links, etc etc. If there are no such articles you can apply the same logic to similar books that cover the same topic.

Adding WikiProject tags can speed up the review process. The option will be available after submitting the draft. You can see a list of projects here.

For more information regarding article development, check this guide.