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==== Layout ==== {{See also|Page layout}} {{anchor|Belly band|Flap|Head|Fore edge|Tail|Gutter}} [[File:Bookinfo.svg|thumb|350px|Diagram of a book {{columns-list|colwidth=30em|{{ordered list|Belly band|Flap|[[Endpaper]]|[[Book cover|Cover]]|Head|Fore edge|Tail|[[Recto and verso|Right page]] (''[[recto]]'' if printing is left to right, ''[[verso]]'' if right to left)|[[Recto and verso|Left page]] (''verso'' if printing is left to right, ''recto'' if right to left)|Gutter}}}}]] Modern books are organized according to a particular format called the book's ''layout''. Although there is great variation in layout, modern books tend to adhere to a set of rules with regard to what the parts of the layout are and what their content usually includes. A basic layout will include a ''front cover'', a ''back cover'' and the book's content which is called its ''body copy'' or ''content pages''. The front cover often bears the book's title (and subtitle, if any) and the name of its author or editor(s). The ''inside front cover'' page is usually left blank in both hardcover and paperback books. The next section, if present, is the book's ''front matter'', which includes all textual material after the front cover but not part of the book's content such as a foreword, a dedication, a table of contents and publisher data such as the book's edition or printing number and place of publication. Between the body copy and the back cover goes the ''end matter'' which would include any indices, sets of tables, diagrams, glossaries or lists of cited works (though an edited book with several authors usually places cited works at the end of each authored chapter). The ''inside back cover'' page, like that inside the front cover, is usually blank. The ''back cover'' is the usual place for the book's [[ISBN]] and maybe a photograph of the author(s)/ editor(s), perhaps with a short introduction to them. Also here often appear plot summaries, barcodes and excerpted reviews of the book.<ref name="ShellyStarks2011">{{cite book |author1=Gary B. Shelly |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PSQJAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA559 |title=Microsoft Publisher 2010: Comprehensive |author2=Joy L. Starks |date=2011 |publisher=Cengage Learning |isbn=978-1-133-17147-8 |page=559 |access-date=December 5, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191221193213/https://books.google.com/books?id=PSQJAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA559 |archive-date=December 21, 2019 |url-status=live}}</ref> The body of the books is usually divided into parts, chapters, sections and sometimes subsections that are composed of at least a paragraph or more.
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