This was the first full-length eBook I've read and I enjoyed it. The issues I had were more with the eBook format than the book itself, such as some of the text appearing 2-3 font sizes smaller than the other printing on the page and odd line breaks in the middle of the line. Also, the book needed a proofreader, as I noted many spelling, grammar, and perhaps AutoCorrect errors, but they didn't affect the book too much.
Plotwise, it was very fast moving and could probably be finished in an afternoon or two. The lead character is an interior designer with a life-threatening heart condition, and loads of turmoil in her family, including a lover who mysteriously vanished, a father whose 'accidental' death was precipitated by his losing his savings trying to bail out her brother from yet another business deal gone bad, and a mother rapidly losing her mind to Alzheimer's. When Alexa's brother, Seth, returns to New York City offering a new stem cell treatment to both her and her mother, Alexa is skeptical that it's another money-sucking scheme he's fallen into, but in seeing her mother's decline is convinced to take to at least give it a try.
Meanwhile, the two principles behind the treatment, Dr. Vee and billionare Winston Barlett, need Alexa's participation in order to hopefully reverse the effects of a secondary procedure both Barlett and his girlfriend underwent that went horribly wrong. While the stem cell procedure has shown to reverse the effects of debilitating diseases and heal damaged tissue, the secondary procedure or Beta, was intended to be the secret to eternal youthfulness, by introducing an enzyme that would restore any dead or aging tissue immediately, maintaining the patient at their current physical age. However, the procedure has shown to restore all the old tissues in Barlett's girlfriend at an accelerated pace, causing the Syndrome, actually causing her to regress to a younger physical and mental age every day.
While I thought the book took a little while to link Alexa to the stem cell procedures, once it did, the action picked up and I found it hard to put down.
The eBook mentioned that the rest of Hoover's work could be downloaded for free, so I'll have to look for them, as I'm curious to see if Alexa's story continues on.