Editorial Inspirations

Editorial Inspirations Editorial Inspirations provides exceptional editing, indexing, and proofreading services to both publishers and authors.

The intent of the author and the publisher is always kept in mind—from the first word to well beyond the end.

05/30/2026

May 29, 1906 – T. H. White’s birthday. T. H. White was able to use his fascination with King Arthur to write his popular, gripping stories such as The Sword in the Stone and The Once and Future King. “The bravest people are the ones who don't mind looking like cowards.”

05/25/2026

May 22, 1859 – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s birthday. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s famous character was Sherlock Holmes. “How often have I said to you that when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth?”

05/17/2026

Writing Prompt of the Month
You are walking along the beach one beautiful morning when you notice something floating near the shoreline. You walk up to it and see that it is a bottle. Inside the bottle is a note. You break open the bottle and read the note. What does it say?

On the night of her sixteenth birthday—hours before her father forces her to marry a complete stranger at a grand ball—P...
05/16/2026

On the night of her sixteenth birthday—hours before her father forces her to marry a complete stranger at a grand ball—Princess Margaret sneaks away from the riches and safety of the palace. Torn between her fate and freedom, the soul-searching princess desperately looks for answers outside the kingdom. In a quest of hidden identities and a stormy voyage on the open seas, this young adult fairy tale explores ancient truths about parental wisdom, friendship, and finding true love.

On the night of her sixteenth birthday—hours before her father forces her to marry a complete stranger at a grand ball—Princess Margaret sneaks away from the riches and safety of the palace. Torn between her fate and freedom, the soul-searching princess desperately looks for answers outside the ...

While there are many ways to work with words, no one person knows how to do it all. This second edition of April Michell...
05/15/2026

While there are many ways to work with words, no one person knows how to do it all. This second edition of April Michelle Davis’s The Insider’s Guide to Expert Editing is chock-full of insights from experts in the field, with a focus on five manuscript service categories that every editor should consider for their arsenal:
Ghostwriting
Manuscript critiquing
Developmental editing
Copyediting
Proofreading
A detailed analysis of each service type is followed by an expert’s key insights from their real-world experiences of working with their clients. In the Insider’s Guide, April Michelle offers practical answers to editorial questions that she has received throughout her career—giving you a seat at the editor’s desk, while revealing the essence of the job and the key strategies to help you succeed.

While there are many ways to work with words, no one person knows how to do it all. This second edition of April Michelle Davis’s is chock-full of insights from experts in the field, with a focus on five manuscript service categories that every editor should consider for their arsenal: A d...

05/14/2026

Most people know how to use semicolons properly, but change the comma to a period to make a colon and then the people are confused. Once you know the rules, colons become a vital part of sentences.

Use the colon after a complete sentence to introduce a list of items when there are no introductory words such as namely, for example, or that is.

Use a colon instead of a semicolon between two strong independent clauses when the second clause explains the first clause and no coordinating conjunction is connecting the clauses. If only one sentence follows the colon, do not capitalize the first word of the new sentence. If two or more sentences follow the colon, capitalize the first word of each sentence.

05/13/2026

"Usually, if I choose the store over the online purchase, it’s because I have a second motive — something beyond the quick, easy transaction. Even the very best and most creative booksellers face a huge hurdle if each customer must be lured in via the literary version of bread and circuses. . . . I like the idea of supporting local businesses, but in practice, I do so mainly when those local businesses are well and interestingly enough run that they bring me in on the merits. They can be more expensive than the bargain basements of the web — but not wildly so. And there has to be value added in exchange for those modestly higher prices. Is that too high a bar to set for businesses run by our neighbors and friends?”

—Marc Fisher in the Washington Post

In his new book, Fixing Our Broken Institutions, Hurwitz employs his engineering background to confront a number of stru...
05/12/2026

In his new book, Fixing Our Broken Institutions, Hurwitz employs his engineering background to confront a number of structural weaknesses in the institutions we rely on. One example; racial tensions in our inner cities.

The author recommends dividing all urban residential districts into manageable neighborhoods that are, clearly demarked, denominated, open-bordered, and traffic restricted. Each neighborhood would be a self-sufficient community with schools, etc. Neighborhood gangs would be conscripted into teams paid for doing constructive work such as maintenance, social services, and crime reporting. Adult sponsors would be responsible for team extra curricular activities.

From their early teens, kids would also be entitled to a monthly stipend paid into his or her private account from which no sums could be withdrawn prior to their twenty-first birthdays. The accounts would be subject to penalties for such infractions as arrests and drug abuse. Thus youths would face a choice of forfeiting their stipends or enjoying a stake in a protective society.

Costs? Programs such as these represent a bargain compared to the fortunes currently spent on law enforcement, etc. Voluntary crime-prevention pays.

April Michelle Davis spent six weeks copyediting this nearly 300-page book. She reviewed the manuscript at the clause level, checking thematic organization at paragraph and sentence levels and checking for consistencies, errors, and omissions. In addition, she checked basic spelling, grammar, punctuation, syntax, and word usage. April Michelle Davis lets her professionalism shine through her experience and skills to work with authors on their manuscripts.

FIXING OUR BROKEN INSTITUTIONS: New Ideas in Economics, Sociology, Politics, & Religion

05/11/2026

I was honored by Marquis Who’s Who when I was recognized for my service and accomplishments in the publishing industry. I have been in the publishing industry for over 25 years and have continued to offer professional advice, training, and assistance to others in the field through the National Association of Independent Writers and Editors (NAIWE) and Editorial Inspirations. Some of my accomplishments and contributions are the publication of several books, providing numerous quotes in other books about the publishing industry, regularly providing training to other industry professionals, and speaking engagements to educate writers and college students about the industry. And as the executive director of NAIWE, I continuously look for and provide opportunities for NAIWE members to grow and prosper in their writing and editing careers.

05/02/2026

L. Frank Baum, author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, was born on May 15, 1856. If you had to choose between having courage, brains, or a heart, which would you pick? Why?

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