Reviews with the most likes.
The good: realistic and interesting life-in-wheelchair details, including how it complicates romantic relationships.
The bad: badly written characters. if the plot needed someone to suddenly be the bad guy, a character who had previously been utterly reliable, the fairy godmother, someone that we were told we could trust, would suddenly be selfish, irrational and mean, then in the next scene when they were needed to be good, back they were to being good. This was true of supporting as well as main characters–this isn't a book that embraces the “show, not tell” or even the “explore real cause and effect in the human psyche” domains of writing. I finished it...but a week later I've already forgotten much but a vague sense of annoyance at the writing and a vague sense of interest in what I learned about living with spinal injuries and quadriplegia. As a pamphlet, it works; as a novel, not so much.