Include either a footnote or endnote to document material you quote or paraphrase in the text of your document. Superscript (raise) a number, in consecutive order, next to the information you wish to reference. Include the superscript number after punctuation, such as periods.
Begin your full footnote or endnote listing with the number that corresponds to the number you used in the text. Follow the number with the book author's name in first name, last name order, as shown here.
1. Jon Teaman.
Italicize the name of the book, followed by the city of the publisher and the publisher, separated by a colon. Conclude the footnote or endnote with the year of publication.
1. Jon Teaman. Coaching Winning Baseball. New York: Random House, 1987.
Construct your humanities style bibliographic entry as follows. Don't forget to italicize the name of the book. Take note of how the order of the author's name changes in the bibliography.
Teaman, Jon. Coaching Winning Baseball. New York: Random House, 1987.
Structure your Chicago Style, author-date format in-text citation in a parenthetical citation. Include the book author's last name, immediately followed by the year of publication. After a comma, include the page number where the material you are documenting is located.
(Teaman 1987, 121)
Lead off your reference list entry with the author's name in last name, first name order. Include the date of publication after the author's name. This is the only variation from a humanities style bibliographic citation.
Teaman, Jon. 1987.
Complete the full-length reference list citation with the book's title--italicized--followed by the publisher's information.
Teaman, Jon. 1987. Coaching Winning Baseball. New York: Random House.