Prince Harry's unflinching new memoir Spare – which tells his version of his life story and is filled with explosive claims about the Royal Family – has already broken records since going on sale.
Harry has not hesitated to draw the curtain back on the private dysfunction he claims exists within the House of Windsor.
He has accused Camilla of leaking stories about him to the press and his brother of physically attacking him in 2019 after an argument about Meghan. His father, Harry claims, didn't hug him when telling him his mother had died: "He wasn’t great at showing emotions under normal circumstances, how could he be expected to show them in such a crisis?" Harry writes.
In addition to his immediate family, Harry hasn't pulled any punches when it comes to the "secondary characters" in the text: palace aides, journalists and even billionaire media mogul Rupert Murdoch, who Harry is particularly scathing about.
Yahoo UK dives into all the swings Harry takes during Spare and who he was aiming at:
It's not a secret that Harry isn't a fan of the journalists in general. He calls those who work on Fleet Street, "a dreadful mob of dweebs and crones and cut-rate criminals and clinically diagnosable sadists".
However it is some of those who make up the "royal rota" with whom he takes the most umbrage, and while he doesn't mention any journalist by name, two in particular are the subject of his ire in Spare.
He is critical of The Daily Telegraph's Camilla Tominey, who was the first to report that Meghan and Kate had fallen out over bridesmaid dresses ahead of the Sussexes 2018 wedding, something he called a "sci-fi fantasy".
"Days later came the coup de grâce: from a royal correspondent, a sci-fi fantasy describing the "growing froideur" (good Lord) between Kate and Meg", Harry wrote. "Claiming that, according to "two sources", Meg had reduced Kate to tears about the bridesmaids' dresses. This particular royal correspondent had always made me ill. She’d always, always got stuff wrong."
Harry goes on to claim that William and Kate denied the accuracy of the story and that they had leaked it, with William allegedly admitting he had mentioned a falling out between Meghan and Kate to Charles and Camilla over dinner.
Tominey has responded, saying: "We always used to have quite a good working relationship, but Harry doesn't seem to take kindly to journalists that don't write anything other than undiluted praise."
The other journalist who feels Harry's disdain is former Sun showbiz editor and GB News presenter Dan Wootton, who first reported that Harry and Meghan intended to leave royal life behind.
Harry called him a "sad little man" who had managed to become a "quasi royal correspondent" through a mutual friend he had with someone on William's communications staff.
"A sad little man, the newspaper’s showbiz editor, was said to be the lead reporter on the story", Harry wrote. "Why him? Why, of all people, the showbiz guy? Because lately he'd refashioned himself into some sort of quasi royal correspondent, largely on the strength of his secret relationship with one particularly close friend of Willy’s comms secretary – who fed him trivial (and mostly fake) gossip."
Wootton has since reacted, saying: "Harry can say what he wants about me…. It’s very clear to me who the “sad little man” in this sorry saga is. It's the one who has trashed almost every blood relative in the most vicious fashion, simply because they tried to save him from himself."
Editors don't fare much better than the journalists in Spare, with Rebekah Brooks in particular receiving a scathing description from Harry.
"Loathsome toad, I gathered. Everyone who knew her was in full agreement that she was an infected pustule on the arse of humanity, plus a s**t excuse for a journalist."
Brooks was editor of the News of the World from 2000-2003, during which stories acquired via the illegal process of phone hacking were published. She was acquitted of all charges at trial in 2014 and is currently the Chief Executive Officer of News UK.
Biographer Angela Levin also seems to get a mention, when Harry references comments she made after their 2020 royal exit that the couple had "blindsided" the Queen. Harry notes that this "quickly became 'the truth' in many circles."
He also added that the fact Levin had written a biography about him meant it was "probably" true she "depended on me to pay her rent".
"She announced these falsehoods with such unfaltering certainty that even I was tempted to believe her, and thus her version of events quickly became "the truth" in many circles. Harry blindsided the Queen! That was the narrative that took hold."
Levin told Buzzfeed: "I have absolutely no idea if Harry is referring to me, but I can tell you that I wasn’t relying on him for my rent. My husband and I bought a house and paid off the mortgage long ago."
Harry also takes swipes at palace aides and staff in his memoir, including Queen Elizabeth's Personal Assistant and Senior Dresser Angela Kelly, who was also said to be one of the late monarch's closest friends.
Harry calls Angela a "troublemaker" and alleges that she was "skilled at planting stories" to the press, though he does not provide any evidence to support this accusation. Further, he details his version of reports that appeared in the press ahead of his 2018 wedding regarding a tiara fitting for Meghan."She was being obstructive, obviously, but for what reason? We couldn’t even hazard a guess", Harry writes about his attempts to schedule the tiara fitting.
"I considered going to Granny, but that would probably mean sparking an all-out confrontation, and I wasn’t quite sure with whom Granny would side. Also, to my mind, Angela was a troublemaker, and I didn’t need her as an enemy."
Harry also refers to a series of three courtiers by the nicknames, "Bee", "Wasp", and "Fly".
The portrait he paints in Spare of these three figures is certainly not a positive one.
He describes Bee as "so poised that people didn’t fear him", which was a "Big mistake. Sometimes their last mistake."
Harry also claims that during the 2020 Sandringham summit, in which he sat down with his family to discuss options for a new working model for him and Meghan, the Bee lied to him about a printer not working.
The duke alleges that this was so the aide was able to avoid admitting that a statement had only been prepared for one option: that Harry and Meghan would have no "royal role" and be out in the cold in terms of security.
The Fly is described as loving "s**t", and spending his professional life being "drawn to it".
"The Fly had spent much of his career adjacent to, and indeed drawn to, shit", Harry wrote
"The offal of government and media, the wormy entrails, he loved it, grew fat on it, rubbed his hands in glee over it, though he pretended otherwise."
Finally, the Wasp was portrayed as seeming "weedy" and "self-effacing" which meant people "might be tempted to push back".
If you did so, Harry claimed, "he’d put you on his list. A short time later, without warning, he’d give you such a stab with his outsized stinger that you’d cry out in confusion."
Paul Burrell, Diana's former butler, is described as making Harry's "blood boil" after he wrote a tell-all book about his time working for the royals.
"My mother once called this butler a dear friend, trusted him implicitly. We did too. Now this. He was milking her disappearance for money. It made my blood boil." Harry wrote.
Burrell told The Sun, that he had almost cried when he saw how Harry had described him, saying: "I'm very, very sad. I almost burst into tears when I saw that he’d attacked me."
Spare also sees Harry namedrop billionaire media magnate Rupert Murdoch in less than flattering terms.
Murdoch is described as having politics "just to the right of the Taliban" and being "evil".
"Of course I didn’t care for Murdoch’s politics, which were just to the right of the Taliban’s. And I didn’t like the harm he did each and every day to Truth", Harry wrote.
Murdoch's "wanton desecration of objective facts", Harry said, meant he "couldn’t think of a single human being in the 300,000-year history of the species who’d done more damage [than Murdoch] to our collective sense of reality."
News UK did not provide comment when asked about the comments regarding Rebekah Brooks and Rupert Murdoch; Buckingham Palace did not provide comment when asked about comments relating to Angela Kelly.
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