I deal with this in my manuscript. You may find books refer to ionic bonds being strong because of their high melting points. Although that can seem true, you have to be careful as to what it means. If you add NaCl to ice, some ice melts as the ions are dissolved. The temperature also falls. This should only tell you about the strength of the matrix, not the strength of an individual bond. You can drive your car over a frozen lake. That does not mean the hydrogen bonds are strong bonds, it means the matrix of hydrogen bonds are stronger than individual bonds themselves. If you built a bridge out of toothpicks, you would not be able to predict it strength by measuring the strength of an individual toothpick.
When you melt an organic compound, you are breaking the matrix of weak bonds. This may include some hydrogen bonds. No covalent bonds are broken during a mp determination (usually). If you introduce another compound to the matrix of a pure compound, will the resulting matrix be weaker, stronger, or just the same? Although this is not explicitly explained, anyone could have reached this same conclusion.