Water is a rather odd molecule in this respect. The oxygen of the water molecule is considerable more electronegative than the two hydrogens (ie. the oxygen holds onto its electrons more tightly than the hydrogen atoms do) leading to a polar bond between the two atoms (there is more electron density towards the oxygen than the hydrogens of the water molecule). This disparity of electrons is so great and the charge of the hydrogen is small enough such that the water molecules engage in what is known as hydrogen bonding between several molecules of water.
Hydrogen bonds are strong interactions between several molecules of water. They help keep molecules of water closer together, making condensed states of the material more stable. The fact that water is a liquid are room temperature at all is rather odd and is due mostly because of these hydrogen bonds - most molecules of a similar size are gases at room temperature (methane, dinitrogen, carbon monoxide).
These hydrogen bonds also lead to another unusual phenomena, the expansion of water as it goes from liquid to solid phase. While relatively strong these hydrogen bonds are able to be broken thermally. At higher temperatures (~100°C) there is very little hydrogen bonding between water molecules, there's just too much energy and they immediately break apart. At around room temperature these interactions become more stable but there is still enough thermal energy to elude crystalline structures. At lower temperatures (~0°C) these hydrogen bonds are stable and form ridge pseudo-covalent bonds between water molecules. The standard morphology of frozen water is a 3-D hexagonal lattice (sort of like a 3-D honeycomb) which actually leads to a less dense material than in the liquid phase.
I think that's everything about the phases of water. Sorry that I went on for a while there.