Meghan Markle and Prince Harry have been asked “what’s next” amid comments by the Duke that he left things out of Spare as well as speculation over Meghan’s own memoir. Royal biographer Christopher Andersen warned that he did not think the Sussexes were
Prince Harry extraordinarily claimed he feels the “responsibility” to reform the monarchy. This drive, he explained in his latest interview, comes from the desire to safeguard Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis, saying the younger son and daughter of the Prince
Prince Harry has shared his concerns over Princes George and Louis and Princess Charlotte that one of his nephews or niece “could end up like him” as the “spare” of the family. While Prince George is currently next in line to the
The Duke of Sussex has told a US breakfast show of his concern for the “young kids” in the Royal Family. In an apparent allusion to the children of his brother Prince William, Harry expressed his fears for future partners in the
Kensington Palace has been urged to respond to claims in Prince Harry’s memoir, Spare, that the friend of an unnamed member of staff took cash payments for selling stories about him and wife Meghan Markle. Quoting several paragaphs of the book, Royal
Sales of Spare have been very strong throughout the anglosphere, with over 1.4million English copies of the tell-all book sold on its first day in Britain, the United States and Canada. However, its performance in France has come as more of a
Queen Elizabeth II was appreciated by so many people because she “never got on your nerves” and kept her opinions to herself, a BBC Question Time panellist has claimed. Daily Telegraph columnist Tim Stanley argued that the late monarch was a “remarkable demonstration”
A former Royal Marine who is mentioned in Prince Harry’s memoir Spare has slammed the Duke, telling him he needs to “shut up” after the royal claimed he killed 25 Taliban fighters during his time with the army in Afghanistan. In reference
Prince Harry revealed his “internal conflict” in his interview with CBS’ Anderson Cooper, a body language expert has claimed. Human behaviour consultant Greg Hartley spotted what he believed was a mistake made by the Prince during the emotional conversation. During the interview,
Dickie Arbiter, the late Queen’s long-serving press secretary, has demanded an apology from publisher Penguin Random House over an alleged inaccuracy in Spare, Prince Harry’s memoir. Without naming him, Harry’s ghostwritten book claimed Mr Arbiter had warned Harry and wife Meghan Markle