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Prince Harry's 'weird' argument with Spare ghostwriter over mum Diana insult

28 May 2023 , 09:11
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Prince Harry
Prince Harry's 'weird' argument with Spare ghostwriter over mum Diana insult

Prince Harry's autobiography, Spare, was one of the most hotly anticipated books of the year.

Breaking the Guinness World Record when it became the biggest selling non-fiction book of all time, Spare was packed full of stories about the Duke of Sussex's life growing up as a royal.

From arguments with his brother, William, to his time as a teenager, Harry wasn't afraid of delving into the most private and personal times of his life.

He also discussed his time serving in the military, including his time on the frontline of Afghanistan, where he revealed he had killed 25 while on his second tour of the country.

Harry admitted he didn't think of those he killed as "people" but as "chess pieces" that were taken off the board.

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Prince Harry's 'weird' argument with Spare ghostwriter over mum Diana insultThe book contained revelations about Harry and his brother Prince William (Getty Images)

He wrote it wasn't possible to kill someone “if you see them as a person” but explains the Army had “trained me to ‘other’ them and they had trained me well.”

Harry wrote in Spare: "I made it my purpose, from day one, to never go to bed with any doubt whether I had done the right thing…whether I had shot at Taliban and only Taliban, without civilians in the vicinity.

"I wanted to return to Great Britain with all my limbs, but more than that I wanted to get home with my conscience intact.”

The young royal's training before serving in Afghanistan is covered in detail in the book with the gruelling missions described in harrowing detail.

One recollection caused a row between the duke and his ghost writer, J.R. Moehringer, and was almost changed before it made it into print in Sapre.

Harry was taking part in a gruelling training exercise in rural England, where he is captured by pretend terrorists, explains Moehringer in an interview with New Yorker

Prince Harry's 'weird' argument with Spare ghostwriter over mum Diana insultThe ghostwriter behind Spare JR Moehringer (Getty Images)

The duke was captured before having a hood rammed over his head and taken to an underground bunker, where the torture began.

He was beaten, left freezing and without food and stripped naked, all the find out if the royal was strong enough to survive being captured on a real life battlefield.

The final horror was when Harry was thrown against a wall and had insults screamed into his face, including one about his mother, Princess Diana.

In his autobiography, Harry was determined to include his retort to his captors - but ghostwriter Moehringer had other ideas.

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He said: "Ending with what he said would dilute the scene’s meaning: that even at the most bizarre and peripheral moments of his life, his central tragedy intrudes.

"For months, I’d been crossing out the comeback, and for months Harry had been pleading for it to go back in."

The duke was far from happy about the line being cut, despite the writer urging him to "trust the book" and Moehringer admits Harry was "glaring into the camera".

While the pair had had disagreements in the past about what should, and shouldn't be included in Spare, the ghostwriter confesses this row felt "different".

Moehringer said: "I was thinking This is so weird. I’m shouting at Prince Harry.

"It felt as if we were hurtling toward some kind of decisive rupture, in part because Harry was no longer saying anything."

But Harry had a powerful reason for demanding his comeback be included in Spare.

Moehringer said: " He [Harry] calmly explained that, all his life, people had belittled his intellectual capabilities, and this flash of cleverness proved that, even after being kicked and punched and deprived of sleep and food, he had his wits about him."

The passage made it into the final cut for Spare.

Jane Lavender

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