how to reference an article in a book
Two formatting styles are used in academic writing: Modern Language Association and the American Psychological Association. The two styles largely require the same information for a book citation, though the order in which it is listed differs. Citing an article within a book requires a slight adjustment to the basic book entry.
For MLA citations, the format for the bibliography citation of an article within a book is as follows: Last name, First. “Title of Article.” Name of Book. City of Publication: Publisher, year of publication. Page numbers of article. When citing the article in text, simply put the author and page number in parenthesis: (Wood 4). If you have already referred to the author in the sentence, such as saying “According to Wood,” omit the author’s name in the parenthetical citation and just list the page number. For APA citations, the format for the bibliography citation is: Last name, First. (Year of publication). Title of Article. In Name of Book (article pages). City of Publication: Publisher. The in-text citation would be: (Author, Year of Publication, p. Page Number), such as (Wood, 2014, p. 4).
In-Text Citation (Quotation) – entry that appears in the body of your paper after a direct quote.
The following format will be used:
NOTE: References must be typed in one of the six approved type faces, and be double spaced.
NOTE: References must be typed one of the six approved type faces and double spaced.
Citing a source that you found in another source is known as using a secondary source.
You should always try to read and cite the original work (the primary source). If it is not possible to do this, you have to cite the original as contained in the secondary source.
In the list of references, record the publication you actually sourced.
(Fong, cited in Bertram 1997)
References:
http://guides.himmelfarb.gwu.edu/c.php?g=27779&p=170363
http://rasmussen.libanswers.com/faq/32693
http://www.wur.nl/en/article/How-do-I-cite-a-source-I-found-in-another-source.htm
http://libguides.scu.edu.au/harvard/secondary-sources
http://apastyle.apa.org/learn/faqs/web-page-no-author