In his explosive memoir Spare, Prince Harry delivers a raw, unsettling portrait of life inside the British monarchy — a world where he claims he was groomed from birth not as a beloved younger son, but as a “stand-in, backup, and spare part” for his older brother, Prince William, the future king.
The book, a global bestseller from the moment it was released, shattered publishing records in the UK with 400,000 copies sold on day one, and more than a million across the U.S., Canada, and Britain within hours. But its true impact lies in the deeply personal revelations Harry makes about hierarchy, childhood, grief, and the irreversible fracture within the royal family.
“The Heir and the Spare” — A Lifetime of Unequal Roles

Harry recounts that from the moment he could understand words, he knew his place.
According to him, King Charles once joked to Princess Diana after Harry’s birth:
“Wonderful! You’ve given me an Heir and a Spare — my job is done.”
Harry writes that the labels shaped every part of his upbringing. During visits to Balmoral Castle in Scotland, William always had the larger bedroom, the finer furnishings, the privileges befitting an Heir.
Harry never questioned it — because the truth, he claims, was always understood.
“I was the Spare. That was my role. My destiny. My life.”
Secret Childhood Hideout: The Brothers’ “H Club”
Despite their differences in rank, the two princes were once inseparable. Harry describes a secret underground hideaway at Highgrove House — their self-declared “H Club” — used for play, escape, and moments of grief.
It was there, Harry says, that he retreated after the death of their mother, Princess Diana, in 1997 — an event that shattered both boys but, he implies, set them on very different paths.
No Hugs for the Queen
Another striking revelation: Harry says royal protocol prevented physical affection even within the family. After a Jubilee event, he recalls wanting to hug his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II.
But that, he writes, was “unthinkable.”
“I had never done it, and I couldn’t imagine under what circumstances it would be allowed.”
Marriage: The Gateway to Full Royal Status
In Spare, Harry claims a royal family member isn’t considered “a full person” within the institution until they marry.
Before Meghan Markle, he says he felt like an outsider, unable to step fully into his role.
“As a single man, I was a ghost. A fringe figure.”
The memoir describes growing resentment as William and Kate struggled — according to Harry — to accept Meghan. The irony, he notes, is that both were fans of Suits long before meeting her.
A Housebound Prince Who Shopped at Discount Stores
Contrary to fantasies of royal glamour, Harry portrays his life as surprisingly ordinary at times — folding laundry, binge-watching Friends, and sneaking to TJ Maxx for discount clothing.
He also recounts needing the Queen’s personal permission to keep his beard for his wedding, a request that triggered a week-long argument with William, who allegedly insisted Harry should shave for protocol.
“Happy to Lie for William, But Not for Me”

One of the memoir’s most incendiary claims is that the Palace deliberately protected William while leaving Harry exposed.
“They were happy to lie to protect my brother.
They were never willing to tell the truth to protect me.”
Harry accuses palace officials of feeding false stories to the media, casting him as the villain when convenient.
Yet, paradoxically, he also admits to obsessively tracking the tabloids — comparing the click of a paparazzi camera to “a gunshot,” while simultaneously admitting he was addicted to news coverage.
The Book as a Silent Indictment of the Monarchy
Critics say Spare reads like both a confession and an accusation — a memoir that exposes the monarchy’s internal hierarchy, trauma cycles, and relentless image-polishing machine.
Harry describes the Crown as both majestic and destructive: a glittering symbol with a “mysterious energy inside,” yet one that demands loyalty at any cost.
According to Harry, he was often the sacrificial shield protecting the Heir.
A Family That Feels Betrayed
While the Palace remains silent — an approach British media have called “dignified restraint” — observers note that Charles and William likely view Spare not as explanation but as betrayal.
Every interview, documentary, and new revelation, they say, reopens old wounds and widens the divide.
For Harry, however, the memoir is his version of truth — a truth forged from grief, jealousy, resentment, and years of feeling overshadowed.