She unlocked a steamy world of mystery…Follow the flight path of a determined airline captain as he seeks the mysterious stewardess who dropped her diary in his briefcase. The more he reads, the racier it gets; each entry more addictive than the last.As he delves further into her written accounts, compelled by her increasingly progressive sexual adventures and excited by the clues he uncovers, … adventures and excited by the clues he uncovers, his obsession grows.
His sexual horizons will expand as he attempts to locate her, but will his womanizing tendencies help him succeed or be his downfall?
If you like smoking-hot voyeurism, innovative storytelling, and sensual scenes that break hetero bounds, then you’ll love S.M. Pratt’s sizzling tale.
The Stewardess’s Diary is a novel written in self-contained episodes. In Part Eight: Holland, the stewardess and one of her co-workers go cycling through the Netherlands and entertain themselves with the handsome men they encounter. The captain believes he may have found her. But did he?
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The stewardess is getting racier.
Charlie is in Holland and the stewardess had a very very good time there! Charlie does what he feels that he can but he’s getting a little jerky but he’s on his way again! I voluntarily reviewed an Advanced Reader Copy of this book.
SM Pratt, The Stewardess’s Diary, part VIII (Holland). (131 pag).
As an ARC reader I received a free copy. I promised a review. Here it is.
For me English is a foreign language. So, sorry for the errors.
In general: A special, touristic journey to the Netherlands.
Main characters:
– Charlie, a veteran pilot for an international airline; narrator in this book.
– Mystery stewardess, writes a diary about her sexual adventures during 10 trips, told in 10 episodes. This book is the 8th trip (to Amsterdam and Maastricht in the Netherlands).
Since the trip to France (part 7) the readers knows that the name of the mystery stewardess is Sophia or Sofie. During the flight to Amsterdam airport Sophia works together – again – with Alex. That’s an older colleaugue she met in episode I, the Mexico flight. This older flight attendant saw that then Sophia was in a dip, caused by a break up with a boyfriend, and she warned her not to stay unhappy. It was much better to have a life in which your happiness was not dependent of boy-friends. Decide for yourself what you like. Carpe diem, live is short and enjoy it. Sophia thought that this was a good advise and tried to use it in Mexico and later.
In Amsterdam they rent a car and travel to the southernmost city of the Netherlands, Maastricht, in the province (Dutch) Limburg. They want to see the ‘normal’ Netherlands outside touristic Amsterdam. (Moreover, it’s debatable if Limburg is characteristic as ‘normal’ Dutch, for it was about 200 years governed as a conquered (from Spain) area by the region Holland. After emancipation (in 19th century) it kept a special mentality, among others due to keeping the Roman Catholic belief, while the most important part of the Netherlands chose the Protestantic religion).
In Maastricht both ladies visit a coffeeshop. Buying weeds is difficult there, for regulations on drugs are very strict in Maastricht. (Here Mademoiselle Pratt’s research is thoroughly. At the end of the 20th century in Maastricht they indeed debated for years how to stop the nuisance, created by Belgian, German and even French tourists, who shopped for weeds in Maastricht. Ultimatelately it resulted in a regulation much stricter than in the rest of the Netherlands.)
But Sophia and Alex seduce the coffee shop holders (good looking twins), get their weed and are invited in the apartment of the twins. They stay overnight and sleep with the gorgeous men. And Sophia learns that twins often share.
Next day they rent bikes and cycle in the beautiful, hilly south of Limburg. At the end of the day they ask a farmer if it’s allowed to camp in a tent on his property. Alex gets in conversation with farmer John, learns that he’s widower and ends the evening with him, nude in a whirlpool in his garden. And both girls enjoy the well endowed widower.
Of course pilot Charlie continues his investigations to find his mystery diary writer. This time he looks for a female flight attendant with the name Sophia (in different spellings). Ultimately he finds a ‘Sofie’ who could be the stewardess he wants to meet. Her next flight will bring her to AMS (Schiphol-airport, Amsterdam). He books this flight as a passenger and is served by a stewardess with the name tag ‘Sophie’. Charlie gets so nervous that he doesn’t dare to approach her. So he follows her after arrival. He meets her in the hotel where they both check in. And they have dinner together. But ‘Sophie’ seems more interested in a date with Terry, who a few times contact her by phone. She’ll meet Terry in a bar. Charlie hears the name of this bar and also visits the place. Terry appears to be a woman. Charlie talks to the two women and learns that ‘Sophie’ never wrote a diary and never had a flight to Thailand. So she’s not ‘his’ stewardess. By chance Charlie drinks from a beer that was destined for ‘Sophie’. Charlie feels suddenly very sick and gets unconscious.
Next morning he awakes in an unknown bed in the room of a stranger. It’s Frank and this man tells him that Terry drugged his beer in the bar and that a very stoned Charlie, once outside, quarreled among others with a cop. So the stranger rescued him by taking Charlie with him to his apartment. Charlie thanks him “for saving my ass”.
He still has some time before his return flight. So he visits Amsterdam’s red light district de Wallen (not “De Walden”). There he sees a prostitute behind the glass window who reminds him of the older neighbour for which he – as a boy – mowed the lawn and who initiated him in the pleasures of sex. He experiences with the prostitute a businesslike blow job and a ‘doggy style’. It heals his ego and his temporary shyness. And Charlie is motivated again to resume his search for the real Sophia.
Living in Holland, this was for me an extra interesting episode. It was well written with much knowledge of my country. I especially loved the part of Alex and Sophia in Limburg. Charlie’s visit to the ‘Wallen’ (and liking it?) seemed to me a bit cliché. The next episode will bring the stewardess to Japan. I’m looking forward to her new experiences.
R.J. Huiszoon.