This is, to put it succinctly, beat poetry at its VERY best.
Absolutely amazing. Iconoclastic, revolutionary, thought-provoking.
The words just roll off the page like a smooth glass of wine rolls off the tongue.
But there's a bite to it.
Kaufman is without a doubt the most underrated of the beat poets and his work defies classification under one convenient label. He has been called a beat poet, a Black poet, a Surrealist poet, a street poet, a modern poet, a revolutionary poet. He is all of those things and more.
At first, I didn't understand the movie-of-the-mind surrealist Caryl Chessman sequences that open this book but when I read it the second time, it dawned on me what Kaufman was doing. This is a scathing indictment of many things in America - the death penalty (of course), genocide (both ethnic and cultural), ecological genocide (the buffalo) and the threat of nuclear war, among other things. And if you stop for a minute, you'll notice that many of these are still genuine threats to the world today.
In this sense, we could say that Kaufman is one of the most RELEVANT poets in the 21st century because his themes are still relevant. Heck, he even predicted a war with Russia coming down from the East. Like the best poets of history (such as William Blake), his work is timeless (it defies the strict limits and restrictions of any given era) and in some sense, it is prophetic (like Blake).
I cannot emphasize highly enough how great a work this is. The only possible better book of poetry than this in the whole beat canon is Kaufman's final work, The Ancient Rain, which is just sublime. Sure go ahead and read Howl and Coney Island of the Mind - those works are great in their own ways, but if you want to read the REAL hidden king of the beat poets, then look no further. Read Bob Kaufman. Like Kaufman himself once said, "And when I die, I won't stay dead."