An irreverent poetry collection that wrestles with questions of family, mortality, cultural history, and identity from the Filipinx-American experience “you showed him your teeth, you dared him to look into your mouth to see the metal bands straightening your jaw into an American smile.”-from Field Guide for Accidents Born in the United States to Filipino immigrants, poet Albert Abonado is no stranger to the language of periphery. Neither wholly “American” nor Filipino, Field Guide for Accidents ‘s speakers are defined by what they are not- not white enough to be born in America, not Asian enough to feel at home in the Philippines. Abonado’s poetry illuminates the strange and surreal in domestic routine, suturing wounds of love, grief, and the contradiction of being Filipinx-American, two identities bound with a hyphen that resists negation. What results is a growing exposure to a world mired in paradox. The poems in Field Guide for Accidents experiment with the constraints of the poetic line, shaping forms that exhume what tend to haunt us in the silence.