Skip to main content

Distributed for Omnidawn Publishing, Inc.

Alibi Lullaby

A collection of poems and essays that embrace musicality and locate the patterns of ancient songs in the body, nature, and world events.
 
Alibi, in Latin, meant “elsewhere,” and “lullaby”—from lull, to soothe, and bye, near, close by—has elements linguistic elements that appear across cultures. Music, from ancient songs recorded on tables to contemporary compositions, share related framing elements that have persisted across time: formal patterns and rhythms, peaceful and hypnotic movements, and elements of terror arising from the moving frontier of “thrill, dread, certainty.”
 
In this collection, Norma Cole considers the ancient and transcendent patterns of music, finding them through nature, heart sounds, the spectral elegance of blood flow, the murmur of melody, and many diverse patterns and beats. Sounds of summer, massacres, “empathy through distress,” unknowing, energy, suspense, and fragility echo throughout the poems and other writings. Drawing on a poetics that embraces formal freefall and looks forward while holding up the shifting mirror of memory, Alibi Lullaby is a lyrical montage at the edges of musicality.
 

86 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2025

Poetry


Omnidawn Publishing, Inc. image

View all books from Omnidawn Publishing, Inc.

Reviews

“Formal permutations, microshifting syllables, hastened, conjoined, and reconstituted sonicscapes undergird Alibi Lullaby. The presence of the multiply heard/seen/felt/touched in Cole’s work pluralizes the sensorium. She acutely observes cultural and political ossifications. Alibi Lullaby attends the evidence and residue of the social and historical event whether here/elsewhere, everyday minutiae, prosodical vulnerability and verve, geopolitical strife—the registers of tenderness and suffering.”

Myung Mi Kim, author of Civil Bound

“Cole recognizes the impermanence of all things, the broken and breaking state we live in, and often try to ignore. She knows the measures by which we locate ourselves in the world (and discourse) have been tampered with, removed, overturned, blotted out, supplanted by lies, and nostalgia for an age that never existed. Cole knows it is happening to everyone, everywhere. A noted translator and accomplished visual artist, she is acutely attuned to the intricate shifting relationship of image, sound, and meaning, as attested to by the title of her book, Alibi Lullaby. . . . The sounds emanating from these powerful poems is our collective heart. The meanings, and there are many, arise out of our well-founded anxiety. Inhabitant of a shattered world that is disintegrating further, she asks if we ‘fall under the apprehension/of seeing and looking away.’ It is the single most pressing question of our time.” — John Yau, author of Tell It Slant 
“Cole’s rigorously spare poem sequence is a lyric like no other today, charming its listeners not to sleep but toward a principled wakefulness. Compressed poems bristle with tensions between language and form, precision and abstraction, lyrical affect and flat critique of a systematic claim of distance (‘elsewhere’) from incidents of harm. Cole’s elegies, laments, and invocations deliver a ‘gentle summons’ against an ‘implicated garland of/ witnesses’ and ‘bodies of/ knowledge/ resisting a solution.’ A beautiful, simmering provocation, Alibi Lullaby challenges and enchants through the deep, dark night of our contemporary day.”

Kimberly Alidio, author of Teeter

“Alibi is elsewhere, and lullabies draw us near. As with much of Cole’s work over the years, the space between is where music exists, where our songs, our indeterminate attention, find their potentialities. The songs in this book are where our world, in all of its fractured hallucinations, oscillates with the hopefulness of some other, less brutal realities. And it is here, in the incantatory music of hope, of the possible, that we are sung into with these poems. For all the darkness that looks to bleed us apart, the language issuing from these pages guide us to be near. Celan once told us that there are songs still to be sung beyond mankind. Here, we have them.”

Jerrold Shiroma, editor of duration press

Be the first to know

Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!

Sign up here for updates about the Press