Crash by Nicole Williams

Crash (Crash, #1)

by Nicole Williams

Southpointe High is the last place Lucy wanted to wind up her senior year of school. Right up until she stumbles into Jude Ryder, a guy whose name has become its own verb, and synonymous with trouble. He's got a rap sheet that runs longer than a senior thesis, has had his name sighed, shouted, and cursed by more women than Lucy dares to ask, and lives at the local boys home where disturbed seems to be the status quo for the residents. Lucy had a stable at best, quirky at worst, upbringing. She lives for wearing the satin down on her ballet shoes, has her sights set on Juilliard, and has been careful to keep trouble out of her life. Up until now…

Jude's everything she knows she needs to stay away from if she wants to separate her past from her future. But she's about to find out that staying away is the only thing she's incapable of.

Reviewed by Ashley on

5 of 5 stars

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BookNook — Young Adult book reviews

OH MY FREAKING GOD!!! Can I give this book a million stars? Can I? CAN I??? I smiled, laughed, and ridiculously giggled my way through this book. Every other page, my eyes would bulge and I would start giggling like some crazy, mad scientist or something.

This book was freaking hilarious. Two pages in, I knew I was going to love it. Lucy is a FABULOUS narrator! She's super witty, sarcastic, and quick-thinking. Her comebacks are the bomb! I was highlighting every other sentence like crazy because I didn't want to forget all the best funny bits!

I LOVE JUDE!!! He's hot, he's sexy, he's a total bad boy, but he's also a sweetheart. I love how he always stands up for Lucy. He doesn't let anyone talk bad about her and he's always the first to defend her. But that doesn't mean Lucy needs defending. She's not a weak damsel in distress and she could certainly stand up for herself. She's got some serious spunk and attitude and would have no problem telling people off for being douchebags.

I had not worked my ass of for the grades I had, or worked tireless summer days waiting tables, or paved my way as a strong woman to be reduced to some object two jealous boys could fight over.
—Crash by Nicole Williams, Page 170


But man, Jude is the kind of guy you definitely shouldn't want to be with. He's dangerous, he runs in bad crowds, he's a heartbreaker. But Nicole Williams did a brilliant job of making me see that and understand it, but want to ignore it completely. Because Jude had me every bit as weak in the knees as Lucy was! The great thing about Jude is that he's honest. Lucy asks him a lot of tough questions about his past and he always does his best to answer them fully and honestly—sometimes even brutally so.

This man was the pope, president, and god of dodging the topic. Too bad for him he was dealing with the queen, holy mother, and empress of seeing through a man's stream of shit.
—Crash by Nicole Williams, Page 178


This is more of an observation than a complaint, but I thought there would be more ballet in the book; there was actually very little. It wasn't necessarily a bad thing, I think it just surprised me.

I almost don't know what else to say about this book. I loved it so much that I feel like I just want to jump around and mash the keyboard with excitement and have that be my review! I mean, what else can I tell you other than that I smiled, laughed, cried, said "Awwwww" about a million times, and nearly smacked my kindle against my head because I was so excited! This book was so powerful, exciting, devastating, and happy all at once. If I were to really dive down and analyse it, I know I could find faults, but I don't want to. Because in the moment, nothing bothered me in the book. I would just be looking for things to critique if I sat down and thought about it. I loved every minute of reading this book and that's that!

You can't be friends with the person you were meant to spend the rest of your life with.
—Crash by Nicole Williams, Page 246

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 8 December, 2012: Finished reading
  • 8 December, 2012: Reviewed