
Moehringer pushed back, and at one point feared he had gone too far.īut then Harry “shot me a mischievous grin,” writes Moehringer, before the prince told him: “‘I really enjoy getting you worked up like that.’” Harry revealed that people had always questioned his intellect, and he felt that the passage would show that he “had his wits about him,” even after being kicked, punched and deprived of sleep and food. Prince Harry served in the British Army for 10 years, completing two tours of Afghanistan and retiring from service in 2015. Moehringer starts by recounting a row with Harry during the editing process, when the prince wanted to include a clever retort he had made after some fellow soldiers had brought up his dead mother, Princess Diana, during a military training exercise.

Moehringer writes about how his family was harassed by the press after his identity was leaked, and how journalists misrepresented parts of the duke’s story. In an op-ed piece for the New Yorker, published Monday, J. The key takeaways from Prince Harry's explosive memoir
