The Works Cited page consists of sources cited within your work, a bibliography consists of sources consulted, whether or not you actually cited them within the work; as a result, it should have more listings than you would have on a Works Cited page. These should be sources that informed your thinking, not just those briefly skimmed. If you picked up a book, admired its binding and replaced it on the shelf, or you enjoyed a website’s graphical choices, yet not much more, don’t put those sources in your bibliography. If, on the other hand, you took notes on valuable passages from a source, which helped you make sense of some particular issue, yet you ended up quoting (and citing) an alternate source, you should still include the first one in a bibliography. According to the MLA the format for an entry in the bibliography and the format for an entry in the Works Cited page is the same format. (See previous section for correct formatting of sources.)