See CMoS 8.154–195, 14.244 | See also Books; Capitalisation; Italics; Websites
The titles or names of albums, artworks, books, films, magazines, maps, newspapers, ships, TV series and blogs should be in italics.
the Age
Rodin’s The Thinker
Gone with the Wind (Margaret Mitchell, 1936), spans the Civil War and Reconstruction years...
As a rule, the name of a collection (eg book of poems, album of songs) is presented in italics; the item contained within (poem, song) is set in roman with quote marks.
‘Yesterday’ appears on their Help! album.
The capricious vendor of Soup Kitchen International was purportedly the inspiration behind ‘The Soup Nazi’ episode of Seinfeld.
Chapter titles, website names (other than blogs) and apps do not take quotation marks or italics.
Angela Meyer, editor of Literary Minded (blogs.crikey.com.au/literary minded) blog, reviews some well-regarded titles in ‘20 Classics in 2011’.