Crash
-
-
4.3 • 46 Ratings
-
-
- $9.99
Publisher Description
If what you see is what you get, Jules is in serious trouble. The suspenseful first in a series from the New York Times bestselling author of the Wake trilogy.
Jules lives with her family above their restaurant, which means she smells like pizza most of the time and drives their double-meatball-shaped food truck to school. It’s not a recipe for popularity, but she can handle that.
What she can’t handle is the recurring vision that haunts her. Over and over, Jules sees a careening truck hit a building and explode...and nine body bags in the snow.
The vision is everywhere—on billboards, television screens, windows—and she’s the only one who sees it. And the more she sees it, the more she sees. The vision is giving her clues, and soon Jules knows what she has to do. Because now she can see the face in one of the body bags, and it’s someone she knows. Someone she has been in love with for as long as she can remember.
In this riveting start to a gripping series from New York Times bestselling author Lisa McMann, Jules has to act—and act fast—to keep her vision from becoming reality.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A key role in running the family restaurant is a lot for any kid to handle; simultaneously protecting a gay brother and a mentally ill father is more than enough complication. High school sophomore Jules Demarco has it even worse: she's also in love with "the enemy" Sawyer Angotti, whose family runs a rival restaurant. She keeps her balance until billboards around town begin showing her a crashing truck and body bags. Only Jules sees these harbingers of doom, and soon they're everywhere, in steadily increasing detail detail that shows that one of those body bags belongs to Sawyer. McMann's (Wake) new series has a well-realized, amusing narrator and great realism in the details of restaurant management and family dysfunction. The questionable part is Jules's visions; there's no reason why this Romeo and Juliet romance needs precognition to work. So little rationale is given for them that it's difficult to see how the device will plausibly support more books. However thin the pretext, though, Jules's voice is quirky and fun there's plenty of reason to read on. Ages 14 up.
Customer Reviews
Good read!
I love Lisa McMann so I was looking for more reads from her. I was skeptical about this book after I read a few negative reviews about it. One particularly long review went on and on about how lame the characters were, how bad the story was, how it focused on a dumb love story and not a girl with visions, etc. I’m glad I ignored that and read it anyway! And seriously, the whole book is about her vision lol. But I liked the story, actually loved characters, and am glad I read it! It’s not the best book in the whole wide world, but I felt like it deserved more positivity! I recommend it:)
Rate
The book was amazing it was great
Disappointed
I picked up this book expecting it to be an exciting novel about a girl who has visions, and thinking it would be just right in terms of its figurative darkness.
The summary describes Crash as a book about a girl who has visions and needs to stop the event they depict from occurring, but I was disappointed to find that this plot was completely overpowered by the element of romance. It is said in the summary that Jules and Sawyer are in love, and, in most books, there is a touch of romance in the background, but I found myself bored reading this because it dwelled more on Sawyer and Jules' budding relationship than the visions and their need to be stopped.
All in all, I think this book droned on and that it should have been described as more of a romance and less of a thriller, although it wasn't terribly written.