![]() ![]() Moehringerīut there was no attempt to address the mistakes and, amid all the bile Harry poured over the Royal Family, the blunders went unchallenged. ![]() Harry's Pulitzer Prize-winning ghost writer, John Moehringer - better known by his pen name J.R. With that, the ghostwriter - who was reportedly paid around £800,000 for his work - and Harry settled back as the sales for Spare went off the charts: 3.2 million in the first week alone. 'The line between memory and fact is blurry, between interpretation and fact,' he wrote.įor good measure, Moehringer shared a quote from Harry himself: 'My memory is my memory, it does what it does, gathers and curates what it sees fit, and there's just as much truth in what I remember and how I remember it as there is in so-called objective facts.' ![]() Moehringer - tweeted some words from the American essayist Mary Karr, which cryptically hinted at 'inadvertent mistakes' in memories and memoir. Perhaps spotting the danger of this narrative, Harry's Pulitzer Prize-winning ghost writer, John Moehringer - better known by his pen name J.R. Back in January when Prince Harry's misery memoir began flying off the shelves, smashing all publishing sales records, one thing rapidly became clear: the lofty promise on the jacket of 'insight, revelation, self-examination and hard-won wisdom' risked being undermined by the book's litany of howlers and historical errors. ![]()
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