[I was] particularly eager to give voice to the women of my mother's place and generation, who grew up in turn-of-the-century, privileged New England households, who really never had a chance to flower and assess themselves and find out who they were. More than anything, I wanted to give voice to the sort of anger that women of that generation could never express for themselves.
Tina HoweThe tools I handle are words. They may be unappreciated or misunderstood, but they tell us who we are.
Tina Howe