Parker gave her first public poetry reading in 1963 in Oakland. In 1968, she began to read her poetry to women's groups at
women's bookstores, coffeehouses and feminist events.
Judy Grahn, a fellow poet and a personal friend, identifies Pat Parker's poetry as a part of the "continuing Black tradition of radical poetry".
Cheryl Clarke, another poet and peer, identifies her as a "lead voice and caller" in the world of lesbian poetry. Designed to confront both black and women's communities with, as Clarke notes, "the precariousness of being non-white, non-male, non-heterosexual in a racist, misogynist, homophobic, imperial culture". Parker and
Audre Lorde first met in 1969 and continued to exchange letters and visits until Parker's death in 1989. Their collaboration inspired many, including lesbian-feminist blues/R&B singer
Nedra Johnson, whose song "Where Will You Be?" has become something of a feminist anthem in the USA. talks extensively about action through language, a similar concept seen in Pat Parker's "Where will you be".
Womanslaughter Parker's elder sister, Shirley Jones, was shot and killed by her husband. Parker wrote the autobiographical poem,
Womanslaughter (1978), based on this event. Parker notes that :Her things were his :including her life. The perpetrator was convicted of "womanslaughter", not murder, vowing :I will come to my sisters :not dutiful, :I will come strong.
Translations In 2014, the small independent press Ra'av (Hebrew for Hunger) published a wide selection of Parker's work in Israel, translated into Hebrew by Yael "belly" Levi-Hazan, Yael (yali) Dekel, and Hani Kavdiel. == Death ==