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Harry the author is desperate to avoid being the new Andrew

Harry has scores to settle in his memoir but the privacy-obsessed Duke is worried about his limited shelf life and becoming irrelevant like his uncle.

While he was still a working royal, Prince Harry harboured a Prince Andrew complex of slipping down the pecking order and becoming irrelevant. Picture: AFP
While he was still a working royal, Prince Harry harboured a Prince Andrew complex of slipping down the pecking order and becoming irrelevant. Picture: AFP

When I last sat down with Prince Harry for an honest, candid, funny and frank interview, he told me he would use his “privileged position” for “good stuff” for “as long as I can, or until I become boring, or until [Prince] George ends up becoming more interesting.”

Harry, then 31 and one of the most popular members of the royal family, seemed aware of his sell-by date. “There’s nothing worse than going through a period in your life where you’re making a massive difference and then suddenly ... you drop off. You want to make a difference but no one’s listening to you.”

Recently it has been almost impossible not to hear Harry, although the jury is out on how much people are still listening. So when he announced last week that at the age of 36 he is writing his “intimate and heartfelt” memoirs, “not as the prince I was born but as the man I have become”, it felt as if Harry thinks his greatest hits are already behind him. After settling in America, why the rush so soon after the soul-baring interview with Oprah Winfrey and a glut of other interventions?

Prince Harry pictured walking out of a tent at the British controlled flight-line at Camp Bastion in Afghanistan's Helmand Province, where he was serving as an Apache Helicopter Pilot/Gunner. Picture: AFP
Prince Harry pictured walking out of a tent at the British controlled flight-line at Camp Bastion in Afghanistan's Helmand Province, where he was serving as an Apache Helicopter Pilot/Gunner. Picture: AFP

A friend of Harry’s says that while he was still a working royal, he harboured a Prince Andrew complex of slipping down the pecking order and becoming irrelevant: “Harry has always been in such a rush to make an ‘impact’, because he thinks he has a limited shelf-life before the public want to hear more from George and his siblings and he worries that after that, he’ll turn into his uncle.”

Harry now wants to tell us about his “dedication to service” and how he’s “worn many hats over the years”, because “my hope is that in telling my story - the highs and lows, the mistakes, the lessons learnt - I can help show that no matter where we come from, we have more in common than we think.”

The privacy-obsessed prince will let us into his head for a rumoured multimillion-dollar advance, with “proceeds” from sales of the book published by Penguin Random House in late 2022, the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee year, going to charity. Harry is said to have been working on a manuscript for more than a year with the American ghostwriter JR Moehringer, who worked with Andre Agassi on his memoir. Whatever is - or isn’t - in the book it is certain to outsell Meghan’s The Bench, which has so far shifted 6,195 copies here.

Meghan’s The Bench, which has so far sold 6,195 copies. Picture: Supplied
Meghan’s The Bench, which has so far sold 6,195 copies. Picture: Supplied

We are likely to hear Harry’s take on the very public breakdown of his parents’ marriage, the impact on his childhood and more on the devastating effects of the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, when he was 12. He has said he failed to deal with it for years, leading to a period of “total chaos” and a near “total breakdown” in his twenties. Of walking behind his mother’s coffin, Harry has said: “I don’t think any child should be asked to do that, under any circumstances.” Will the book reveal who asked him and what choice, if any, he was given?

The coffin of Princess Diana making its way to Westminster Abbey on September 06 1997. Following behind are Prince Charles, right, Prince Harry, centre, and Diana’s brother, Earl Spencer, left. Picture: AP
The coffin of Princess Diana making its way to Westminster Abbey on September 06 1997. Following behind are Prince Charles, right, Prince Harry, centre, and Diana’s brother, Earl Spencer, left. Picture: AP

How Harry chooses to relay the “party prince” years, when he was living it up in London nightclubs and smoking cannabis at his father’s Highgrove home, leading Charles to arrange a visit to a rehab centre, will be fascinating. Will the period be analysed retrospectively as the reeling aftermath of his mother’s tragic death? Or will there be candour about a young, privileged prince having a blast and doing what many young men in his position would have done?

“I never thought he was out of control then,” says a source who knows Harry well. “In his new Californian guise, I think he’ll tell it honestly, framed in the context of his ‘journey’ towards ‘healing’. I think there will be a lot of the old broken me versus the new fixed me who dealt with the pain, and a lot about Meghan as the woman who liberated me to deal with it all.”

A source close to Harry says the memoir will feature a lot about Meghan as the woman who liberated him to deal with all the pain. Pictured are Prince Harry with his wife, Meghan, and their son, Archie, following his christening. Picture: AFP
A source close to Harry says the memoir will feature a lot about Meghan as the woman who liberated him to deal with all the pain. Pictured are Prince Harry with his wife, Meghan, and their son, Archie, following his christening. Picture: AFP

A seasoned royal watcher says they are “looking forward to the Vegas chapter”, one of Harry’s most notorious escapades when he was photographed naked playing strip billiards in a Las Vegas hotel suite in 2012 shortly before being deployed to Afghanistan. “Too much army, not enough prince,” Harry later said, admitting: “I let my family down.”

Having become so outspoken on race and “unconscious bias” after meeting Meghan, the first mixed-race woman to marry into the modern royal family, what will Harry tell us he learnt after calling an Asian army colleague “our little P*** friend” while at Sandhurst military academy in 2006? The incident was widely condemned, a year after he was forced to apologise for wearing a Nazi uniform to a fancy dress party. “He’ll be smart enough to know that to gloss over those incidents would undermine the book,” says a royal source who knows him.

Prince Harry pictured in 2007 wearing a costume representing a World War Two German Nazi uniform. Picture: Supplied
Prince Harry pictured in 2007 wearing a costume representing a World War Two German Nazi uniform. Picture: Supplied

Harry’s account of family life will be intriguing - how the triumphant trio of William, Kate and Harry briefly became the “Fab Four” with Meghan, their fairytale wedding with the no-show by Thomas Markle, the father-in-law he has never met, William and Harry’s rift, the painful split from the royal family and their new life in America, right up to the controversy last month surrounding the naming of their new daughter, Lilibet. The Sussexes called in lawyers to dispute a BBC report that the Queen was “not asked” about the intimate nickname. “False and defamatory” said team Sussex. The BBC stood by the story. Buckingham Palace did not dispute it.

What will Harry’s version of life inside and outside the royal goldfish bowl look like? He has pledged total honesty, and is “excited for people to read a first-hand account of my life that’s accurate and wholly truthful”. But as the Queen’s statement following the bombshell Oprah interview in March pointed out, “some recollections may vary”.

Harry’s account of family life will be intriguing - how the triumphant trio of William, Kate and Harry briefly became the ‘Fab Four’ with Meghan. Picture: AP
Harry’s account of family life will be intriguing - how the triumphant trio of William, Kate and Harry briefly became the ‘Fab Four’ with Meghan. Picture: AP

In that interview, and in the mental health documentary series Harry made with Winfrey, he claimed that talking about mental health struggles with his family was off-limits, “just not a conversation that would be had”. Royal life “wasn’t an environment where I was encouraged to talk about it”. His comments left some of his family, royal insiders and the public scratching their heads. After all, Harry, William and Kate championed ending the stigma around mental health for several years in their hugely successful Heads Together campaign.

On the Armchair Expert podcast in May, Harry also credited “a conversation I had with my now-wife” for his decision to have therapy. Yet in another podcast in 2017, Harry said he sought professional help “three years ago” encouraged by William, who told him: “You really need to deal with this.” The inconsistencies in some of Harry’s recent recollections have been well documented, leading some to describe him as a “revisionist historian”. Harry’s rumoured ghostwriter has spoken about the importance of honesty.

Prince Harry gives explosive new details of Royal life on the Armchair Expert

There is little hope in royal circles that will happen. The Sussexes’ recent outbursts have driven once-loyal aides to despair. Charles has been portrayed as an emotionally and financially stingy parent. A source close to him says: “He has genuinely been so upset by it all. He just doesn’t recognise any of the examples or narrative.” Friends of William and Harry say William, who was forced to publicly defend his family against accusations of racism after the interview with Winfrey, “despairs” of his brother but the shock factor is wearing off.

Harry has done brilliant things in his time. Moving the dial on mental health, serving Queen and country at war and celebrating the resilience of servicemen and women with the Invictus Games, are just a few of his achievements. Nobody should begrudge him wanting to bang the drum there, and if he wants to bare his soul on how he has coped with undeniable adversity and tragedy in his life, fair enough. But if his book becomes the main course of a score-settling feast, following the appetisers of what we have so far heard since he left these shores, then he will lose many more hearts and his greatest fear will be realised - “no one is listening”.

The Times

Read related topics:Royal Family

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/the-times/harry-the-author-is-desperate-to-avoid-being-the-new-andrew/news-story/3bb5e884127f001fa66ad89a9f742d14