Since criminals have been prevented from profiting from publishing their memoirs, never before has an announcement by a publisher of new memoirs met with the unanimous disgust in the British press when Prince Harry announced his intention to publish his memoirs in the fall of next year.

This is what was stated in an article by journalist Catherine Bennett in the British newspaper (The Guardian) that dealt with the responses and criticism of Prince Harry's announcement of his memoirs, in which he recounts his "mistakes" and "lessons he learned" in life.

The writer criticized the prejudice with which the subject of the memoirs were met, and said that in the eyes of the royal family's guards, there was nothing that could justify Prince Harry's decision to publish the "intimate and honest" memoirs with the help of the award-winning American author Moringer.

Bennett said that "not even gangster-turned-memoirist, Frankie Fraser, known as the lunatic, was not found guilty of bringing shame to his family."

Pointing out that the reason for criticizing Prince Harry's memoirs lies in the possibility of embarrassing the British royal family, and the date of its announced publication coincided with the silver jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II, the writer said, "If the Fraser, in his torture of the Chris family, had extracted the teeth of his victims with pliers, he did not He never comes close to embarrassing the Queen, and has never done so in a more brutal way, in a Jubilee year."


The writer said that advocates of abolition culture welcome what traditional opponents of the media say that freedom of expression must have its limits.

Bennett explained that there are those who have criticized the book, which they haven't seen yet, as being self-indulgent, greedy and mischievous, needless, biased, perfidious, hypocritical, and premature.

Bennett believed that the memoirs assisted by a brilliant writer may be able to paint a fuller and clearer picture of the royal family, which has suffered so much misfortune.

"Given the writer's inspirational choice, this may be the best memoir ever written by a member of the British royal family, but will (critics) find solace in it or will it make it worse?" asked Bennett.

Prince Harry, who withdrew from the British royal family, Meghan Markle, announced last week his intention to publish a memoir at the end of 2022, in which he recounts his "mistakes" and "lessons he learned", according to what was announced last week by the publishing house "Penguin Random House". (Penguin Random House) publisher of the work.