Ronnie Burk, born in Sinton, Texas, April 1, 1955, was a visionary poet,
a remarkable collagist, and a dedicated political activist. In his youth
he studied Buddhism and literature at the Naropa Institute in Colorado.
Mango Publications brought out his first book, En el jardin de los
nopales, in 1979. He was active in the early Chicano movement of the
1970s and became a leading force in the controversial San Francisco
branch of ACT UP, fighting for the rights of people diagnosed with HIV.
Throughout his life Burk traveled widely and sought out like-minded
friends and mentors, including Allen Ginsberg, Diane di Prima, Charles
Henri Ford, and Philip Lamantia. He lived in the Southwest, Hawaii, and
the two cities he was based in and loved most, San Francisco and New
York. Ronnie Burk died in 2003 at the age of forty-seven. This is the
first published volume of his writing.