Entertainment

Prince Harry memoir, Spare, to be released on Jan. 10

Prince Harry's memoir, an object of obsessive anticipation worldwide since it was first announced last year, is coming out on Jan. 10.

The memoir has been eagerly anticipated by royal watchers since first announced in mid-2021

Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, leave Westminster Hall, London, on Sept. 14 during proceedings after the death of Queen Elizabeth II. (Danny Lawson/The Associated Press)

Prince Harry's memoir, an object of obsessive anticipation worldwide since it was first announced last year, is coming out on Jan. 10.

The book will be called Spare and is being billed by Penguin Random House as an account told with "raw, unflinching honesty" and filled with "insight, revelation, self-examination and hard-won wisdom about the eternal power of love over grief."

In a statement released Thursday, Penguin Random House summoned memories of the stunning death in 1997 of Prince Harry's mother, Diana, and of Harry and his brother, William, "walking behind their mother's coffin as the world watched in sorrow — and horror."

"As Diana, Princess of Wales, was laid to rest, billions wondered what the princes must be thinking and feeling — and how their lives would play out from that point on," the statement reads in part.

"For Harry, this is his story at last."

The memoir's title is an apparent reference to Prince Harry's being a royal "spare," not the first in line to succession. William, Prince of Wales, is next in line.

The 416-page book will come out in 16 languages, from Dutch to Portuguese, and also will be released in an audio edition read by Prince Harry. Financial terms were not disclosed, but Harry, the Duke of Sussex, will be using proceeds from Spare to donate to British charities. He has already given $1.5 million US to Sentebale, an organization he co-founded with Prince Seeiso of Lesotho to help children and young people in Lesotho and Botswana affected by HIV/AIDS.

Penguin Random House identifies Prince Harry as "a husband, father, humanitarian, military veteran, mental wellness advocate and environmentalist."

Royals watchers and the public at large have speculated endlessly since the book was first announced in July 2021.

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The Duke of Sussex had already revealed a news-making willingness to discuss his private life when he and his American-born wife, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, were interviewed for a March 2021 broadcast by their neighbour in Santa Barbara, Calif., Oprah Winfrey. The couple spoke of Meghan's deep unhappiness with her new life in England, the alleged racism within the Royal Family and Harry's fear that his wife's life might be endangered had they remained in his native country.

In 1992, Diana worked with author Andrew Morton on her explosive memoir Diana: Her True Story, in which she described at length her unhappy marriage to the future King Charles, Harry's father.

Harry and Meghan stepped back from their royal duties in 2020 and moved to the U.S. Harry told Winfrey that his family cut him off financially and that he helped pay for his security with money left to him by his mother. They have launched numerous initiatives, including a Netflix production deal and the "impact-driven non-profit" Archewell Foundation.

The book's delay led to rumours that Harry was hesitating to say too much about his family, or was perhaps revising the narrative after his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, died in September. He has spoken of being estranged from his brother, William, although the siblings and their wives appeared in public together during the mourning period following the Queen's death.

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