Yes, we should italicize book titles, magazines, and stories. Italicizing them is a common convention in writing to distinguish these types of works from the rest of the text. For example, 'The Great Gatsby' as a book title would be italicized. Magazines like 'Time' are also italicized. And short stories such as 'The Lottery' are italicized as well. This helps readers quickly identify the specific works being referred to within a piece of writing.
In most writing styles, including MLA and APA, book titles, magazines, and stories are italicized. For example, in a research paper using MLA style, if you mention the book '1984', it should be italicized. The same goes for magazines like 'Vogue'. When it comes to stories, if it's part of a collection, such as a short story in 'The Complete Stories of Flannery O'Connor', the individual story title is italicized. However, in some less formal writing, you might use underlining instead if italicizing isn't possible, but italicizing is the preferred and more modern method.
You can italicize titles of short stories by using the italic formatting option in your word processing software. Just select the title and click the italic button.
In MLA, comic book titles should be italicized. This helps to distinguish them from regular text and indicates that they are a distinct work. It's a standard formatting rule to make the citation clear and consistent.
You usually italicize novel titles. This is a widely accepted rule in the world of writing. It makes the title stand out and indicates that it's a specific work of literature.