- Two days after the book’s January 10 release.
- Prince Harry’s ghostwriter Spare broke his silence over claims of inaccuracy in the book.
- J. R. Moehringer appeared to defend the Duke of Sussex and his book.
Two days after the book’s January 10 release on Thursday, Prince Harry’s ghostwriter Spare broke his silence over claims of inaccuracy in the book.
According to sources, writer J. R. Moehringer appeared to defend the Duke of Sussex and his book, despite claims of’serious factual errors’ in it.
Moehringer took to Twitter to share a photo that cryptically alluded to ‘inadvertent mistakes’ in Prince Harry’s memoir as a result of ‘the line between memory and fact’ being blurry.
In his tweet, the author quoted another writer, Mary Karr, saying, “The line between memory and fact is blurry, between interpretation and fact. There are inadvertent mistakes of those kind out of the wazoo.”
Moehringer then shared a quote from Prince Harry, in which he appears to admit that he is “unsure” about the veracity of the stories in his book.
“Whatever the cause, my memory is my memory… there’s just as much truth in what I remember and how I remember it as there is in so-called objective facts.” the quote reads.
This comes after experts pointed out numerous inconsistencies in Prince Harry’s version of events in Spare, including a claim that he was at Eton when the Queen Mother died, despite evidence that he was in Switzerland at the time.
In his book, Prince Harry also claimed that his Aunt Sarah gave him an Xbox, but the timeline suggests that the gaming console did not exist at the time.
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