Burns often used humor to discuss both anti-Indigenous sentiments and everyday Native American experiences. Both come together in her piece "Sure You Can Ask Me a Personal Question," as she outlines a fictional conversation with a White woman interrogating the poet's identity and then piling on a litany of stereotypes. Her work
Alphabet Serenade provides an early critique of gentrification of the Lower East Side. Burns performed her poetry at numerous local New York City venues, including the
American Indian Community House. She was particularly committed to performance. In an interview with
Joseph Bruchac, she said, "I would rather read poetry in front of an audience more than almost anything else." Her work "Big Fun" is notable as a poetic riff on "49" songs, a popular post-powwow social music genre. A recitation of this poem is featured by
Ho-Chunk and
Luiseno (
Pechanga) visual artist
Sky Hopinka, who presented a video homage to Burns as part of his exhibit at the
Museum of Modern Art, ''I'll Remember You as You Were, not as What You'll Become'' (2016). Burns' combination of humor and performance can also be seen in an apparent exchange with Anishinaabe (
Fon du Lac) writer and comedian
Jim Northrup. In his book
Anishinaabe Syndicated: A View from the Rez, Northrup describes reading poetry at the Nuyorican Poets Café and then offering Burns wild rice. In a set-aside text, he then writes (apparently to Burns): "Question: Is that really a poem or did you just make it up? Answer: Yes." The writer
Steve Cannon credited Burns with enabling his work with the
Tribes magazine and
A Gathering of the Tribes gallery to exist, since she provided material support and labor after he lost his home in a fire and was struggling with sight-impairment. In 1986, she was one of a handful of poets invited by the
Sandinistans to attend the
Rubén Dario Poetry Festival in Nicaragua. She travelled with Harjo, Ginsberg, and
Pedro Pietri. and
Survival This Way, Individual poems were included in various magazines and journals in the 1980s.
American Indian Literature: An Anthology, Indivisible: Poems for Social Justice, Native American Literature: An Anthology, Truth & Lies: An Anthology of Poems, New Worlds of Literature, A Multicultural Reader, Bowery Women: Poems, ''and That's What She Said: Contemporary Poetry and Fiction by Native American Women.'' == Notable works ==