Prince Harry's next memoir could be an attack on the Queen if it takes aim at the family within the page.
This book, published by Penguin Random House and due out at the end of the month, will not directly criticize the long-reigning monarch.
Despite various dramas between Harry and his father, Prince Charles, 73, and brother, Prince William, 40, Harry, 37, has stepped down from the reigning royal family. After his death, he remained close to his grandmother, the Queen. He moved to California with Meghan Markle.
READ MORE: Duchess Meghan fails to send official birthday message, resulting in Queen's 'notable' cynicism
In an interview with Invictus Games earlier this year, Harry said of his relationship with his grandmother:
But Harry risks destabilizing this special relationship with the publication of his memoir. Betrayal of the Queen.
Whether or not the Duke's memoir will be the dynamite that blows up the royal family is yet to be proven, but there are clear signs that it could be.
Tensions between Harry and his family have continued for a long time. It's no secret that Harry feels neglected by many royals. In particular, her 75-year-old brother, father and stepmother Camilla, who "perceives" Meghan to be racist, reports News.com.
Already, the prince and his wife Meghan, 41, had a tell-all interview with Oprah that left the royal family reeling. When Harry comes out with his book in 2021, his memoir will go all out, too.
He does not write the book as the prince he was born, but as the man he became, adding: Failures, mistakes, lessons learned - wherever we come from can show that we have more in common than we think.
I've been through life I am thrilled that people will read a first-hand account of my life that is accurate and completely true.
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Royal Biographer Tom BowerRecently Released The author of Revenge: Meghan, Harry And The War Between the Windsors, Harry handed over the juicy details of his family life to his ghostwriter — Pulitzer Prize-winning author J.R. Moehringer — for $20 million. I believe I have secured an advance payment for the publication deal, which includes the memoir, reports News.com.
In Bauer's opinion, Harry "seemed gleefully betraying all the values he once held dear. During a conversation with his memoir ghostwriter John Mohringer,
"To obtain an estimated advance of about $20 million, Harry was expected to give Mohringer emotional feelings. Confessions and secret details. Settle scores with his family and friends.
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