Thanks, Eric, and good morning, everyone. We are pleased with our strong performance in the quarter and continued momentum in our business. Our results came in ahead of our expectations, driven by better-than-expected comps and solid margin expansion. Based on our strong performance and continued momentum, we are raising our sales and earnings guidance for the full year. For the quarter, net sales increased 13.7% to $515 million, driven by a 7.9% increase in comparable store sales and new store unit growth. Our comp store sales growth was driven primarily by transactions. Ollie's Army increased 4.1% to 13.5 million members, representing over 80% of our sales. During the quarter, we opened six new stores, ending with 482 stores in 29 states. We are pleased with the first half performance of our new stores. While early, as a group, these stores have performed above plan to date. Gross margin improved 650 basis points to 38.2%, in line with our expectations, driven primarily by favorable supply chain costs as well as higher merchandise margins. SG&A expenses as a percentage of net sales was flat to last year at 26.2%. As a reminder, we did not accrue for incentive compensation expense a year ago based on performance versus plan. Excluding incentive compensation expense, we levered SG&A by approximately 40 basis points. Operating income increased 218% to $53 million and operating margin increased 650 basis points to 10.2% in the quarter. Adjusted net income increased 205% to $42 million and adjusted earnings per share was $0.67 compared to $0.22 last year. Adjusted EBITDA increased 147% to $64 million and adjusted EBITDA margin increased 670 basis points to 12.4% for the quarter. Turning to the balance sheet. Our cash position remains strong, with $310 million between cash on hand and short-term investments and no outstanding borrowings under our revolving credit facility at quarter end. Inventories increased 1% to $498 million, primarily driven by new store growth, partially offset by the benefit of lower capitalized freight costs and normalization of lead times on our in-transit inventory. Adjusting for these items, our inventory increased 5%. Capital expenditures totaled $26 million in the quarter and were primarily for the development of new stores, the remodeling of existing stores, the completion of our Pennsylvania distribution center expansion and the construction of our new distribution center in Illinois. During the quarter, we bought back 277,000 shares of our common stock for a total of $17 million. At the end of the quarter, we had $109 million remaining on our current share repurchase authorization. We are committed to returning capital to our investors through share repurchases, while balancing our strategic growth opportunities and working capital needs. Turning to our outlook for the full year. Given our strong first half performance and continued positive trends in our business, we are raising both our sales and earnings outlook for fiscal 2023. For the full year, which includes a 53rd week, we now expect total net sales of $2.076 billion to $2.091 billion, comparable store sales growth of 4% to 4.5%. The opening of 45 new stores left one closure; gross margin in the range of 39.1% to 39.3%; operating income of $212 million to $219 million; adjusted net income of $165 million to $170 million and adjusted net income per diluted share of $2.65 to $2.74; an annual effective tax rate of 25.1%, which excludes the tax benefits related to stock-based compensation; diluted weighted average shares outstanding of approximately 62 million; and capital expenditures of approximately $125 million, including $75 million for the construction of our fourth distribution center and the expansion of our Pennsylvania distribution center. Lastly, let me provide some commentary on our expectations in terms of the quarterly flow for the balance of the year. Based on the underlying trends in our business, we are confident in raising our third quarter comparable store sales expectation from flat to a positive 2% to 3%. This includes one less advertising flyer in the quarter, which shifts out of the third quarter and into the fourth quarter. We estimate the ad shift could negatively impact our third quarter comp store sales by approximately one full percentage point. With the ever-changing nature of our product assortment, we are leaving our comp store sales expectation for Q4 unchanged for now, with comps expected slightly higher than our long-term algo of 1% to 2%. Looking at new store openings, we expect to open approximately 23 new stores in the third quarter, which will result in a significant step-up in preopening expense. We have opened 10 stores so far in the third quarter. Finally, our gross margin expectations for the back half are unchanged. Gross margin will follow a more normal seasonal pattern this year, which calls for slightly higher gross margin in the third quarter and slightly lower gross margin in the fourth quarter. We expect much more modest year-over-year gross margin expansion for Q3 and Q4 compared to the first half as we lap more normalized supply chain costs in the back half of last year Now let me turn the call back over to John.