News

Dublin teen named youth poet laureate of Alameda County

Guan selected out of record 52 applicants

Teens from Dublin and Albany are this year's youth poet laureate and youth poet vice-laureate in Alameda County, according to the Alameda County Library, which has held the competition for the past three years.

Dublin's Brian Guan is the Alameda County youth poet laureate for the 2023-24 term. (Photo courtesy Alameda County)

Brian Guan of Dublin is the youth poet laureate and Sunwoo (Sunny) Eom of Albany is the county's youth poet vice-laureate.

The winners were announced publicly Aug. 25 at the Cherryland Community Center after the judges considered six finalists from among a record 52 applicants.

"The Alameda County Youth Poet Laureate competition celebrates teen voices from all over the county," said Nate Miley, president of the Alameda County Board of Supervisors. "When teens express themselves creatively and authentically through poetry, they inspire our next generation of leaders to amplify their voices and make a difference in their communities."

The other finalists were Rose America Garcia of San Leandro, Vyahruti Gudoor of Fremont, Lia Le-Nguyen of Fremont and Anika Yu of Dublin.

Help sustain the local news you depend on.

Your contribution matters. Become a member today.

Join

The competition was open to Alameda County teens 13 to 18 years old and was held during National Poetry Month in April. Judges based their decisions on the content of each teen's poetry, how well it was crafted and the poetry's voice. Applicants submitted three poems each.

"When I served as a judge during the inaugural year of the Alameda County Youth Poet Laureate competition, I learned just how talented youth poets are," County Librarian Cindy Chadwick said in a statement. "I congratulate the winners, finalists, and all applicants for their participation in this year's competition."

Guan and Eom will be ambassadors through August 2024, using their status to inspire other Alameda County youth to get involved civically while promoting social justice, literary excellence and cultural awareness.

For winning, Guan will receive a MacBook Pro, a suite of Apple products and his poetry will be included in the National Poetry Anthology. Eom will receive an iPad and a suite of Apple products.

"Poetry is a medium of humanity," Guan said in a statement. "It is emotion distilled into words and line breaks. Poetry is empathetic. Poetry is the spark before change."

Eom said, "Poetry inspires me to reevaluate my assumptions and understandings of both language and the world it encapsulates."

Sunwoo (Sunny) Eom of Albany is the poet vice-laureate for Alameda County. (Photo courtesy Alameda County)

"Poetry offers a space for me to voice up and be vulnerable, and I aim to share untold stories of my community through it," Eom added.

Winners and finalists from this year's competition will be invited to recite their work at events throughout the year. Winners are eligible to compete in the regional youth poet laureate and state of California youth poet laureate competitions.

Previous winners from Alameda County have been finalists in the state competition, which is notable because this is only the third year for the competition in the county, said Jenny Rogers, a librarian in the social justice services department of the Alameda County Library. Rogers' department facilitates the competition. What struck her from among this year's 12 semifinalists was the level of enthusiasm and vision that each poet had.

Stay informed

Get the latest local news and information sent straight to your inbox.

Stay informed

Get the latest local news and information sent straight to your inbox.

Looking for more Livermore stories? The Livermore Vine will be your new source of vital news and information. Sign up to be among the first to get our daily local news headlines sent to your inbox for free.

Follow PleasantonWeekly.com and the Pleasanton Weekly on Twitter @pleasantonnews, Facebook and on Instagram @pleasantonweekly for breaking news, local events, photos, videos and more.

Stay informed on important education news. Sign up for our FREE daily Express newsletter.

Dublin teen named youth poet laureate of Alameda County

Guan selected out of record 52 applicants

by Keith Burbank / Bay City News Service

Uploaded: Wed, Sep 6, 2023, 8:37 am

Teens from Dublin and Albany are this year's youth poet laureate and youth poet vice-laureate in Alameda County, according to the Alameda County Library, which has held the competition for the past three years.

Brian Guan of Dublin is the youth poet laureate and Sunwoo (Sunny) Eom of Albany is the county's youth poet vice-laureate.

The winners were announced publicly Aug. 25 at the Cherryland Community Center after the judges considered six finalists from among a record 52 applicants.

"The Alameda County Youth Poet Laureate competition celebrates teen voices from all over the county," said Nate Miley, president of the Alameda County Board of Supervisors. "When teens express themselves creatively and authentically through poetry, they inspire our next generation of leaders to amplify their voices and make a difference in their communities."

The other finalists were Rose America Garcia of San Leandro, Vyahruti Gudoor of Fremont, Lia Le-Nguyen of Fremont and Anika Yu of Dublin.

The competition was open to Alameda County teens 13 to 18 years old and was held during National Poetry Month in April. Judges based their decisions on the content of each teen's poetry, how well it was crafted and the poetry's voice. Applicants submitted three poems each.

"When I served as a judge during the inaugural year of the Alameda County Youth Poet Laureate competition, I learned just how talented youth poets are," County Librarian Cindy Chadwick said in a statement. "I congratulate the winners, finalists, and all applicants for their participation in this year's competition."

Guan and Eom will be ambassadors through August 2024, using their status to inspire other Alameda County youth to get involved civically while promoting social justice, literary excellence and cultural awareness.

For winning, Guan will receive a MacBook Pro, a suite of Apple products and his poetry will be included in the National Poetry Anthology. Eom will receive an iPad and a suite of Apple products.

"Poetry is a medium of humanity," Guan said in a statement. "It is emotion distilled into words and line breaks. Poetry is empathetic. Poetry is the spark before change."

Eom said, "Poetry inspires me to reevaluate my assumptions and understandings of both language and the world it encapsulates."

"Poetry offers a space for me to voice up and be vulnerable, and I aim to share untold stories of my community through it," Eom added.

Winners and finalists from this year's competition will be invited to recite their work at events throughout the year. Winners are eligible to compete in the regional youth poet laureate and state of California youth poet laureate competitions.

Previous winners from Alameda County have been finalists in the state competition, which is notable because this is only the third year for the competition in the county, said Jenny Rogers, a librarian in the social justice services department of the Alameda County Library. Rogers' department facilitates the competition. What struck her from among this year's 12 semifinalists was the level of enthusiasm and vision that each poet had.

Comments

There are no comments yet. Please share yours below.

Post a comment

In order to encourage respectful and thoughtful discussion, commenting on stories is available to those who are registered users. If you are already a registered user and the commenting form is not below, you need to log in. If you are not registered, you can do so here.

Please make sure your comments are truthful, on-topic and do not disrespect another poster. Don't be snarky or belittling. All postings are subject to our TERMS OF USE, and may be deleted if deemed inappropriate by our staff.

See our announcement about requiring registration for commenting.