The opening paragraph of Kenneth Cain's GQ portrait of Joe Lieberman's failed Senatorial primary race against Ned Lamott provides a sweet example of the rule of three and the power of parallelism. Although these rhetorical devices are ably explained on Michael Harvey's crystal-clear "Nuts and Bolts of College Writing," site, magazine writer Cain's use demonstrates their value to professional writers who rely on such rhetorical strategies with every sentence they craft.
"Outsiders tend to think of Connecticut as leafy, white, and wealthy, but its three biggest cities—Hartford, New Haven, and Bridgeport—are hardscrabble, black, and poor."
It may seem an obvious stylistic and structural choice, but how often do we make one like it?
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