Crash Into You by Katie McGarry

Crash Into You (Pushing the Limits, #3)

by Katie McGarry

'KISS ME,' Isaiah whispers.

My heart beats frantically

Isaiah is hot and scary and hot.

Why would a guy like him want to be anywhere near A GIRL LIKE ME?

People expect Rachel Young to be the good girl who always gets straight As.

But Rachel's keeping her real life secret.

Her wealthy family have no idea that she loves racing strangers in her mustang. Or about dangerous, intense Isaiah Walker

Isaiah has secrets, too. And the last thing he needs is to get tangled up with a rich girl slumming it.

But when their shared love of speed puts their lives in jeopardy, Isaiah and Rachel have six weeks to come up with a way out - and to discover just how far they'll go to save each other.

Praise for Katie McGarry

'The love story of the year' - Teen Now on Pushing the Limits

'A real page-turner' - Mizz onPushing the Limits.

'A romance with a difference' - Bliss onPushing the Limits

The Pushing the Limits Series

1. Pushing the Limits

2. Dare You To

3. Crash Into You

4. Take Me On

Reviewed by Amber on

2 of 5 stars

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After being rather annoyed over Dare You To and the disaster that was Beth and Ryan's relationship, I was so ready for Crash Into You to bring back the awesome that I experienced while reading Pushing the Limits. I was hesitant, sure, but I was still looking forward to it. Unfortunately, I enjoyed Crash Into You even less than Dare You To, and I ended up completely bored.

I find that I am getting so tired of the bad boy/good girl storyline. It feels so cliché now, and I didn't feel like Crash Into You brought anything new to the series, or the genre. I'm at the point where I just end up rolling my eyes at the mere mention of a guy in a leather jacket come to seduce a straight A student.

The instalove didn't help the matter, either. I didn't have a chance to get to know either character before Isaiah saw Rachel and started calling her his angel. I hate it when characters don't - or can't - stand on their own. They need to be actual people before they become someone's ~True Love~.

The car racing part was kind of cool. The finale was very anti-climactic, but the rest of the illegal drag-racing reminded me so much of The Fast and the Furious, which is one of my favourite movie franchises, FYI.

Another interesting thing about the novel was Isaiah's mother. I thought that that storyline could have been very interesting, except it was hardly featured at all. I wish that the storyline had been given more focus, instead of the drag racing and the stupid love story. There was so much potential there and I feel like it was shoved aside in favour of a romance that could ~save lives~.

I probably won't continue with this series, as I feel it's become redundant and I don't think anything new is going to arise in the fourth book. In addition, I'm not all that interested in West, who is the main character of the fourth book. Like, at all.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 9 November, 2013: Finished reading
  • 9 November, 2013: Reviewed