This turned out to be just an okay read for me. It has some good but I found myself frustrated and getting less interested as the book went on.
I'll start with the good.
The premise is interesting. A severely disabled girl gets in a fight with her doctor only to wake up in a morgue three months later. She's been declared dead but somehow is alive, no longer appears to be disabled, and is also much taller than her previous self. She's at a loss for the time jump or changes but knows her brother, Jamie, is now in the hands of Dr. Morgan and she must get to him before Morgan does her brother harm. The problem is, where is Jamie?
This is essentially a YA super hero story with a mix of mystery and action. The pace of the story never stops from the first page onwards.
The amount of diversity in the book is great. Usually I read lesfic (books with an f/f couple), which this is not, but I was curious why the LGBT label was being applied. It's because we get a gay male, married couple that plays a prominent role, a transgendered character, and an asexual character. Apart from the married couple, there are no love interests or romance in the book.
There's also some ethnic diversity and disability diversity. Jo, the lead for the story suffers from MS (Multiple Sclerosis) and the other "super heroes" in the story generally also have some disability (Epilepsy, etc.) which is what brought them to Dr. Morgan in the first place.
Each of the characters are distinct, even when there's little interaction with them.
What brings the story down for me is that I actually didn't really like Jo all that much. This may sound weird but she isn't nice. "Nice" is one of those bland adjectives that is so innocuous it can even sometimes be used as an insult but, in this case, it's not. When I asked myself what was bothering me about Jo that was the answer my psyche supplied. Jo, for all intensive purposes, is basically a curmudgeon. She does have the spirit of not giving up both in her disabled and super hero forms but she also kind of bumbled her way through to each experience instead of having some stroke of cleverness.
There's some awkwardness in certain scenes that didn't feel right. Mainly, there are a couple of crucial times in the story with Jo's motorcycle helmet that struck me as odd. For ex, there's a scene in a restaurant where, for some reason, Jo is sitting in a booth but has her helmet on. Why? Or little things like she's talking to someone while on the motorbike but her helmet is on. In my experience, unless there's no shield or the helmet has a mike to the other rider, you can't hear the person over the sound of the bike and the sound buffering the helmet provides. Jo's height also gets incredibly tall which would be a very conspicuous thing that would 1) most likely make her very awkward in her body but doesn't and 2) stand out like crazy and get attention from everywhere but neither of those come up. That kind of thing.
And then there were editorial issues whether that was down to missing or incorrect words (I vs I'm, for ex), a convoluted plot (I have to admit, I got lost), or somewhat unbelievable elements or jarring transitions.
A lot of others seem to like this story so I don't want to discourage people from reading it for themselves and having their own opinion. For me, though, it wasn't a great fit.