ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY INSTRUCTIONS 1. Choose a poet, writer, songwriter, artist, or playwright 2. Choose one work by that poet, writer, songwriter, artist, or playwright 3. Research that poet, writer, songwriter, artist, or playwright You need to find at least two sources about the poet, writer, songwriter, artist, or playwright Sources include books, magazines, reputable webpages (not Wikipedia), peerreviewed journals, videos, interviews, etc. Both of your sources for the person CAN be the same type of source 4. Research the one work you chose by that poet, writer, songwriter, artist, or playwright You need to find at least two sources about the work you have chosen Sources include books, magazines, reputable webpages (not Wikipedia), peerreviewed journals, videos, interviews, etc. Both of your sources for the work CAN be the same type of source 5. Cite each source (you will have 4 sources total) Correct formatting for citations can be found on the Purdue Owl Site and in your English 101 textbooks Every period and comma matter in a citation, as well as formatting (italicizing book titles, etc.) I will be using Purdue Owl to check that your citations are correct List your citations in alphabetical order, regardless of the order in which you found them during your research 6. Annotate each source When you annotate something, you create explanatory notes about it Therefore, under each citation, you will write 1 paragraph summarizing the source 1 paragraph explaining why that source would be valuable to you if you had to write a paper (if you actually had to write one, which you DO NOT) about your chosen poet, writer, songwriter, artist, or playwright and their one work. Please note: Though a standard paragraph is at least 5 sentences long, I am only requiring 4 sentences for each paragraph. However, you may write as many as 5 sentences. In my example Annotated Bib featuring Amos Lee’s song, “Flower,” you will notice that one of the summaries