You must include a block quotation in each post. Block quotations are used whenever you quote at least four lines of text. Use block quotations when you want to discuss a section of text in detail -- your discussion will generally be at least as long as the section you quote. Block quotations are seldom appropriate in essays you will write for class, but they are perfect for blog posts because they give us a real feel for the prose of you book you are reading. Note the citation's punctuation: in a block quote, the page number goes outside the punctuation of the quotation itself. (123)After your block quotation, you will respond to it or comment on it. Make sure you are not just summarizing the quotation. When you start new paragraphs, you may choose to indent the first line, as is traditional in print, or you may choose to skip a line, which is more readable on the screen. Choose as your subject one of the following:
- Ask and answer literal questions: What did you like about the excerpt or what did you notice?
- Ask and answer interpretive questions: What is the author trying to say? How do you think the characters feel here? What kind of reaction did you have?
- Ask and answer thematic questions: What is this passage about? How does it connect to other parts of the book, other books, or your life?
Lastname, Firstname. Title of book. Publication city: Publisher, Year of publication.
This is a model comment. In this comment, I am writing in complete sentences and responding to an idea from the post in a constructive way. When you post a comment, it should be a short thoughtful paragraph. Comments will not receive credit if they are less than a few sentences, or if they do not respond specifically to an idea in the post. Some possible sentence starters: I agree with... Have you considered... This reminds me of... I'm curious about... I'm interested in...
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