When I was in high school, I was in the marching band. Depending on the venue, I played either the baritone saxophone or the bass saxophone. All 5’5″ and 90 lbs. of me, so it was no easy feat. During my sophomore year, we traveled to an away game that would decide whether the football team went on to the state championships for our division.
During that game it rained, it sleeted, it snowed. The marching band performed valiantly, and the football team a little less so. We lost to a team whose quarterback would become my brother-in-law a few years later. By the time we loaded onto the bus for the long ride home, the marching band was mostly frozen into our uniforms. We were lucky they were heavy wool, because although we were all soaked and frozen, we were fairly warm sealed up inside that wet wool. I spent most of the ride home with the harness for the bass sax still attached, because my hair was frozen to it.
On the drive there, we’d done much cheering and chanting, but the ride home was more subdued. A well-meaning, but misguided cheerleader started up a familiar cheer. At the point in the cheer when the audience was supposed to respond with “We’re Number One!” I answered in my loudest, crowd-piercing voice: “We’re Number Two!” I got some glares, but the tired and frozen brass section behind me took up the chant. Honestly, we weren’t bitter. The team had made it further than anyone expected us to. There was no shame in having come in second.
That’s how I feel this morning, upon being informed that All the Ugly and Wonderful Things received the second highest number of votes in the Goodreads Choice Awards for Best Fiction. 27,000 people voted my book! I got more votes than Jodi Picoult (mind=boggled).
So in honor of all the second place runners up, I am celebrating!
I’m Number Two!
And thank you to everybody who voted for me! If you’d like to celebrate with me, please consider leaving me a review on your preferred online venue. Reviews really do make a huge difference.
WOWWWW! That is so awesome! You were in some hefty competition, and while I think it is well-deserved, it’s no easy feat to rank so high. Congratulations, and I’m so happy for you (and proud of you!)
Yes, I think I was the underdog, along with the guy who wrote Lily and the Octopus, since all the other nominees are NYT bestsellers.
I was ecstatic to see how well you did! MAJOR congats and celebration are in order!! #2 is AMAZING!!
I am SHOCKED! Shocked, I tell you.
Wish I was there to “sponsor” your celebrating!!
LOL! I don’t know if my liver could take the kind of celebrating we’d do.
Awesome! Like you said, #2 is nothing to scoff at, especially with your stiff competition. I was one of the 27,000 votes, thanks for reminding me to finally get my crap together and write a review (I have already told friends and family verbally to read it, but like you said, a permanent online review is as good/better).
Thanks, Ross. Much appreciated!
Congratulations on making the 25 best books list of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, posted in this Sunday’s paper (12/4)!
Dora and I were just laughing about the weirdly troubling blurb the Post-Dispatch used for it.
Congrats, Bryn. That is so impressive and so well deserved. Number one would be even better deserved!
Thanks, Kell! I can’t knock #2 though.
Congratulations!
Thanks!