
I lay there for a moment, dazed, then got to my feet and told him to get out.” I landed on the dog’s bowl, which cracked under my back, the pieces cutting into me. He grabbed me by the collar, ripping my necklace, and he knocked me to the floor.

Apparently, William (whom Harry calls his “archnemesis” elsewhere) called Meghan “difficult,” “rude,” and “abrasive.” And after Harry peaced out to the kitchen to get his brother some water, he said this happened: “He set down the water, called me another name, then came at me. The alleged altercation took place in Harry’s kitchen at Nottingham Cottage, where they were fighting about Meghan Markle.

Harry Accused William of Physically Attacking Him Like, for everyone worried Spare would simply rehash what Harry said in his Oprah interview and during his Netflix docuseries, you are NOT prepared. Some fans are sympathetic to Harry and what he has gone through, while some think it’s time Harry practice a little gratitude and others simply shared lighthearted jokes about the memoir.But the good news is that people who simply couldn’t wait for Spare to hit shelves on January 10 pretty much don’t have to, as outlets are busy writing up the most salacious excerpts from Harry’s memoir. The Economist called the memoir an “ill-advised romp.”įans have gone easier on the book than critics.“Open the book and you discover quite a different Harry from the cool, square-jawed metrosexual Californian on the cover. The London Times called the book a “400-page therapy session for mystic Harry,” wrote James Marriott.“Harry comes across as honest and reflective, but also angry, thin-skinned, disoriented” Henry Mance wrote in the Financial Times.According to Lucy Pavia with the Independent, the book “sets fire to the royal family.” Pavis claims the book is “beautifully” written and “doesn’t so much lift the curtain on private royal life than rip it off and shake out its contents.”.

In places it feels like the longest angry drunk text ever sent,” per the BBC. Sean Coughlan, a royal correspondent said “Spare” is “part confession, part rant and part love letter.“At once emotional and embittered, the royal memoir is mired in a paradox: drawing endless attention in an effort to renounce fame,” Alexandra Jacobs wrote for The New York Times.Prince Harry expressed concerns about Camilla, and everything else we know about his upcoming memoir ‘Spare’.
