Although the discussions memories of the prince Henry of England -‘in the shade‘ is from the Spanish title or ‘Replacement’ in English, so do not go on sale worldwide until this date. Tuesday, January 10since last thursday a trace of revelation and leak undesirable for Penguin Random House Publishing GroupSeeing all the efforts made to not reveal any content until the date of the book’s release. yes ok ‘Guardian’ He opened the season by publishing a small excerpt, One of the biggest editorial leaks in history was carried out by several Spanish bookstores that bypassed the embargo. and it sold dozens of copies ahead of time.
Some readers were able to purchase copies “which arrived on time to avoid delays due to the festive bridge of the Kings” at La Casa del Libro in Barcelona, the Jarcha bookstore in Madrid, or the Central de Zaragoza. They put icing three interviews duke of sussex gave British network ITV and Americans CBS and ABCwhere he goes new details from his autobiographywritten by the pen of the journalist J.R. Moehringerfamous author memories of tennis player André Agassi.
possible Prince Harry to retire from royal duties in 2020but he and his wife, Meghan Markle, have not left the limelight or controversy since. Describe “his truth” and the misery of the Windsors He gave a report to the Sussexes real wealth: $20 million for the memoir and another $100 million for a five-year audio-visual commitment In addition to the documentary released last month, Netflix also features a children’s program, among other content.
Here are the last confessions:
1) Diana’s lock, who helped Archie conceive
Enrique, 38, explains in the book: she held a box with a lock of her late mother’s hairPrincess Dianaon your nightstand and you’re thinking served as a kind of good luck charm Carlos III, who helped her and Meghan conceive their first son, Archie, who would have been 4 years old on the day of his grandfather’s coronation. Prince explains that Meghan took two home pregnancy tests in the bathroom of Nottingham Cottage, where they lived in 2018; and left them on the table next to the blue box with Lady Di’s hair.
2) Guillermo, “my dear brother and archenemy”
In an interview with ABC’s Good Morning America host Michael Strahan, Enrique refers to his brother Guillermo as his “beloved brother and archenemy”. “There has always been a rivalry between us (…). He plays the heir, and I am one of the backups,” he admits. grabbed me by the neck, broke the chain and threw me to the ground. I fell into the kennel crackling under my back and the pieces cut me off. I stood there for a moment in amazement, then I stood up and told him to leave,” the Duke of Sussex explains.
3) Psychics and the hereafter
At the end of the memoirs, Enrique describes an encounter with a woman. middlewent to try Contact Lady Di. The oracle told him that his mother was there, “present,” and he felt something at that moment. strong heat in the neck and she felt her eyes watering. The woman also told her that she knew Diana was “looking for clarity and answers” that she would eventually find. would eventually arrive.
4) Guillermo’s alarming baldness
Reunited at the funeral of his grandfather, Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, in the spring of 2021, Harry realized how much his brother, who was only two years his senior, had changed. He noticed that his resemblance to his mother, Lady Di, had completely disappeared, although he kept the “familiar frown” “which is always the norm” when they met and talked. A few paragraphs later, Enrique realized what really seemed to him. “worrying” is her brother’s hair loss. “[Su alopecia] more advanced than mine”, specifies.
5) Full throttle from the Paris tunnel
One of the most shocking passages in the book is when the prince explains that he was driving through the same Paris tunnel where his mother died in 1997 and deliberately asked the driver to go at the same speed as the Mercedes that Lady Diana crashed into. her boyfriend, Dodi Al Fayed. “It was a bad idea”“At 23, I had a lot of bad ideas, but this was one of the worst (…). That was the night when all doubts were cleared.”
6) “My father didn’t hug me”
Princess Diana’s death was a before and after in Enrique’s life. He admits that in August 1997, Prince Charles sat down on his bed and told what had happened. “My father didn’t hug me. He wasn’t very good at expressing his feelings under normal circumstances. It’s true that he put his hand on my knee and said: ‘Everything will be fine’Until the funeral, Enrique couldn’t cry. It’s shocking to know that until the age of 20, he believed his mother had fabricated her misfortune to escape media pressure.
7) Loss of virginity
His first experience with sex was a huge fiasco, a bit “humiliating” as he puts it in the book. he was old just turned 17, in an area behind a “very busy” English bar. He went with an old woman who treated him like a “young stallion”. “He spanked me and threw me out,” she explains.
8) Playing with drugs
Enrique isn’t shy about talking about his past drug experiences. says he tried cocaine, cannabis and hallucinogenic mushrooms. His first contact with Koka was on a weekend. 17 years, but then repeated several times. He also admitted that he did. hallucinogenic drugs at a celebrity event in California and smoked marijuana After her first date with Meghan Markle. it says after trying hallucinogenic mushrooms finally started chatting with furniture. “It wasn’t very funny, it didn’t make me happy, but it made me feel different,” she admits.
9) The dangerous villain Camila
In her autobiography, she describes how both she and her brother accepted their father’s relationship with Camilla Parker-Bowles: but they were against marriage. “We didn’t think it was necessary. It would do more harm than good, and if (Carlos) was good with that person that was more than enough. If it’s not necessary, why go further. be happy and we saw that person was there and it was good, it was enough,” he explains. Enrique points to Camilla and says she has launched a covert media campaign to pave the way for marriage.. He even explains that he wants her to be happy because that way it’s “less dangerous”. “She was dangerous because of her connections with the British press and she had the capacity to exchange information on both sides (…). Camila sacrificed me for her personal altar of public relations,” she insists.
10) Guillermo and Kate and Nazi costume
One of the most controversial chapters in Enrique’s biography was a nazi costumeHe was encouraged by his brother and sister-in-law, according to the Duke of Sussex. ‘Page Six’ brings together how Enrique describes which moment in the book. Current princes of Wales ‘howled with laughter’ when they see her in the infamous outfit. Enrique didn’t know whether to dress as a Nazi or a pilot. “I called ‘Willy,’ his sister’s family nickname, and Kate, I asked them what they thought. They said it was a Nazi uniform,” he writes.
11) Saying goodbye to your brother after the wedding
“Us Weekly” takes a snippet from the book in which Enrique explains that he feels he has lost his brother “forever” after marrying Kate Middleton. He felt this celebration as “another farewell.” “The brother I accompanied to Westminster Abbey that morning was gone forever,” the Duke writes. “Who can deny that? There would never be Willy again. We would never again be able to ride horses together in the Lesotho countryside with our cloaks floating behind us. We will never share a horse-scented cabin again as we learn to fly…” he concludes.
12) A “backup” for his father
English title of the memoirs, ‘Replacement’ means ‘replace’The adjective given to him by his own father on the day he was born. “Originally, Henry said how his father, now King Charles, told his supposed wife, Princess Diana, on his birthday, ‘Great! Now you’ve given me an heir and a backup: my job. done’”, collected “The Guardian.” The British source adds that Enrique’s “anger at being ‘no more’” is a “unifying theme” of the book.
13) 25 Taliban purges
Military experts have already criticized Enrique for giving too many details about his missions in the Army, particularly in Afghanistan in 2012-13. He assures himself that he rightfully participated in six operations with fatalities. “It wasn’t a status I was proud of, but I’m not ashamed either. Because I found myself in the heat and turmoil of war, I didn’t think of those 25 people as human beings. they were chess pieces removed from the board, the bad people removed before they could kill the good ones,” writes Carlos’ youngest son.