Published in Overland Issue 228 Spring 2017 · Uncategorized The Task Eileen Chong after Sharon Olds We fished with lines, not nets. My father came home once and put two shells in my hand. Crabs poked their eyes out, watching to see what I would do. My mother chose crabs at the market. Grey-green armour, impenetrable. The crabs would sit in a basin on the floor of the laundry while my mother pounded spices. I once filled the tub with water. I’d thought they might drown. In the sink, my mother would push aside their legs, locate their underside flaps and stab them with the pointed end of a chopstick. I’d read that you could kill by placing crabs in the freezer. A slow, painless death. It was my task to unwrap the string from the dead ones. My father would prise off their top shells, remove the gills, and rinse out the guts. My mother would quarter each with a cleaver. When the crabs arrived at the table, swimming in sauce, my father would reassemble his. Lift the carapace. I liked breaking off the legs, snapping the joints and easing out the flesh in one intact sliver. Biting the meat off the cartilage in a single pull. I left the claws to the others, preferring only what I could mine through my own precise undoings. Read the rest of Overland 228 If you enjoyed this poem, buy the issue Or subscribe and receive four outstanding issues for a year Eileen Chong Eileen Chong is an Australian poet. She is the author of nine books. We Speak of Flowers is forthcoming from UQP in 2025. Website: www.eileenchong.com.au More by Eileen Chong › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 20 December 202420 December 2024 · Reviews Slippery totalities: appendices on oil and politics in Australia and beyond Scott Robinson Kurmelovs writes at this level of confusion and contradiction for an audience whose unspoken but vaguely progressive politics he takes for granted and yet whose assumed knowledge resembles that of an outraged teenager. There should be a young adult genre of political journalism to accommodate books like this. 19 December 202419 December 2024 · Reviews Reading JH Prynne aloud: Poems 2016-2024 John Kinsella Poems 2016-2024 is a massive, vibrant and immersive collation of JH Prynne’s small press publication across this period. Some would call it a late life creative flourish, a glorious coda, but I don’t see it this way. Rather, this is an accumulation of concerns across a lifetime that have both relied on earlier form work and newly "discovered" expressions of genre that require recasting, resaying, and varying.