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Imagine almost any Alfred Hitchcock film that you have enjoyed, and you understand the pull of Psychological Suspense. These are books that play with our minds, that create frisson of unease, that blend the creepiness generated by the Horror genre with the tension inherent in Suspense. These are stories that attract a range of readers—and filmmakers—and fit uneasily in any related genre into which we try to slot them. Title: The Reader’s Advisory Guide to Genre Fiction Author: Joyce G. Saricks City of publication: Chicago Publisher: American Library Association Copyright date: 2001 Page number: 186 Create an entry for an annotated bibliography for the above passage.

User Richey
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Answer:

Bibliographic Card

Source number: 1

Saricks, Joyce G. The Reader’s Advisory Guide to Genre Fiction. Chicago: American Library Association, 2001. 186. Print.

Note Card

Source number: 1

Heading: Definition of Psychological Suspense

Text: “These are books that play with our minds, that create frisson of unease, that blend the creepiness generated by the Horror genre with the tension inherent in Suspense.”

Page number: 186

Step-by-step explanation:

on edg. 2021

User Smocking
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We are given the title, the author, the city of publication, the publisher, the date of publishing, and the page number. The entry for the annotated bibliography using the latest APA format is
Saricks, J. G. (2001). The Reader’s Advisory Guide to Genre Fiction. Chicago: American Library Association, p 186.
User Skatun
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