Prince Harry will answer fans' questions during a live video event to promote his memoir, Spare.
People around the world can buy tickets and submit questions for the virtual event, which comes a month after the highly-anticipated book hit the shelves. Harry used the pages of his book to hit out at his family, accusing his brother Prince William of physically attacking him and King Charles of refusing to hug him with Diana died.
He will sit down with Dr. Gabor Maté, a renowned speaker and bestselling author, to discuss living with loss and the importance of personal healing.
Harry’s late mother, Diana, Princess of Wales, died in a car crash in Paris in 1997 when the duke was just 12 years old.
In Spare, he described how difficult it was to deal with her death and he described the princess as his “guardian angel” and said she is with him “all the time”.
Harry’s grandmother, the late Queen, died in September 2022, the year after the death of his grandfather, the Duke of Edinburgh.
The duke and his wife, Meghan, have also spoken about the baby they lost when the duchess suffered a miscarriage in the summer of 2020, a year after her first son Archie was born.
Ticket holders will be invited to submit questions to ask the Prince during the event, which takes place on Saturday, March 4.
The terms and condition part of the event description reads: "Ticket holders will be viewing a live conversation; however, there will be no live audience participation. Chat will be disabled and any question pre-submitted and chosen to be asked live will be read by the moderator."
And guests will have to follow strict rules about recording the event.
The website states: "This is a LIVE virtual event only; no recording will be shared with attendees and recording or sharing of the event is strictly prohibited.
"Anyone discovered to have shared or recorded proprietary material may be prevented from registering for Penguin Random House events in the future."
Tickets will set you back just £17 plus a £2.12 fee for UK customers, which includes a copy of the book.
What did you think of Prince Harry's book? Have your say in the comment section below.
Harry hasn't revealed how much cash he made from the book, however he has given some of the profits to charity.
He donated $1,500,000 to Sentebale, an organisation he founded with Prince Seeiso, and £300,000 to WellChild, which he was Patron of before leaving the royal family.
The Duke of Sussex’s controversial memoir has become the fastest-selling non-fiction book in the UK since records began in 1998.
According to Nielsen BookData, which collects and provides information on distribution and sales measurement of books, Harry’s headline-grabbing autobiography Spare sold 467,183 copies in its first week.
The memoir, which hit the shelves on January 10, broke the previous record of 210,506 set by the first Pinch Of Nom cookbook – written by Kay Allinson – in 2019.
The Nielsen BookData does not include e-books or audiobooks and refers only to the sale of physical copies.
Spare, which was ghostwritten by JR Moehringer, is the only non-fiction book to make it into the top 10 fastest-selling books in the UK since records began.
- For more information and to buy tickets, click here.