DRAMATIC TURN: Harry and Meghan sign £50 million deal to publish a second memoir — William tells aides it could be the “end of trust forever”
In a development that has reignited the flames of one of the most enduring family feuds in modern royal history, Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, have reportedly inked a blockbuster £50 million ($65 million) publishing deal with Penguin Random House for a second explosive memoir. This sequel to Harry’s 2023 tell-all Spare—which sold over 6 million copies worldwide and shattered sales records—is said to delve even deeper into the Sussexes’ post-royal life, their ongoing battles with the British tabloid press, and unresolved grievances with the Windsor family. The announcement, leaked to select media outlets amid heightened palace tensions, has prompted Prince William to confide in his closest aides that the move signals “the end of trust forever,” according to insiders, marking what could be an irreparable fracture in the brothers’ already strained relationship.
The deal, reportedly finalized in secret over the summer of 2025, expands on the Sussexes’ original four-book agreement with Penguin Random House, signed in 2021 for an estimated $20 million (£15.7 million). That initial contract included Spare, a wellness guide by Meghan, a joint book on leadership and philanthropy, and a placeholder for Harry’s second memoir—rumored to be held back until after Queen Elizabeth II’s passing to avoid further familial discord. Sources close to the negotiations reveal that the new £50 million figure encompasses not only the second memoir but also potential adaptations, such as a Netflix series, tying into the couple’s renewed multi-year first-look deal with the streaming giant announced in August 2025. “This is Harry and Meghan doubling down on their narrative,” a publishing executive familiar with the talks told this outlet. “After Spare‘s success, publishers are betting big on more revelations. But at this price, it’s a high-stakes gamble.”
Spare, ghostwritten by J.R. Moehringer and released in January 2023, was a seismic event for the royal family. The book detailed Harry’s childhood traumas, his rift with brother William—including a physical altercation in 2019—and criticisms of stepmother Camilla, Queen Consort. It became the fastest-selling nonfiction book in UK history, with 467,183 copies sold in its first week alone, generating millions in royalties for Harry while donating proceeds to charities like Sentebale and WellChild. However, the memoir’s unflinching disclosures exacerbated the Sussexes’ estrangement from the Firm, leading to Harry’s security downgrade and exclusion from key family events. In a recent ITV interview on September 15, 2025, Harry defended Spare as “not about revenge” but a “series of corrections” to media distortions, insisting his conscience is clear as he seeks reconciliation with father King Charles III following their brief tea reunion last week—the first in 19 months.
The second memoir, tentatively titled After Spare or The Spare’s Shadow, is expected to focus on the couple’s life in Montecito, California, since Megxit in 2020. Insiders claim it will cover Meghan’s struggles with suicidal thoughts during her time as a working royal, the couple’s legal victories against tabloids like The Sun (where Harry secured an eight-figure settlement in January 2025), and fresh allegations of institutional racism and bullying within the palace. “Harry has held back before, but this one goes all in,” a source close to the Sussexes revealed. “It’s about their truth, their philanthropy through Archewell, and why the family refuses to protect them.” Meghan’s involvement is pivotal; the book will reportedly include her perspective, blending memoir with elements of her anticipated wellness guide, delayed amid their Netflix commitments. The £50 million valuation—roughly three times the original advance—reflects the couple’s brand power, bolstered by their Archewell Foundation’s global impact and Harry’s Invictus Games, which celebrated its 10th anniversary in 2025.
This dramatic turn comes at a precarious time for the royals. King Charles III, 76, continues cancer treatments announced in February 2024, while William, 43, and Kate Middleton prepare for increased duties amid whispers of a “slimmed-down monarchy.” The Sussexes’ deal has blindsided Kensington Palace, where William is said to have gathered aides for an emergency briefing on September 14. “He told them flat out: ‘This could be the end of trust forever,'” a palace insider confided. “William sees it as another betrayal, especially after Harry’s recent overtures for peace. Spare was bad enough; a sequel feels like war.” The Prince of Wales, who has prioritized mental health advocacy through his Royal Foundation, views the memoir as a direct threat to family unity, potentially reigniting public scrutiny just as polls show monarchy support at 62% in the UK—up slightly from 2024 lows but vulnerable to scandal.
The fallout echoes past tensions. In April 2025, royal experts speculated that Harry’s ongoing UK court appeals over security could catalyze a second book, with biographer Robert Lacey warning it might “spill more royal secrets” if he loses. William, already protective of his children’s privacy—Prince George, 12; Princess Charlotte, 9; and Prince Louis, 7—fears the memoir could drag the Waleses into the spotlight again, as Spare did with claims of William’s physical attack and Kate’s alleged role in Meghan’s isolation. “William’s reeling,” the source added. “He’s told aides to brace for impact; no more olive branches to Harry.” Kate, recovering from her own health challenges in 2024, is reportedly “devastated,” focusing on shielding the children from the “toxic cycle.”
Public reaction is mixed. On X (formerly Twitter), royal watchers are abuzz: one user posted on July 12, 2025, questioning a rumored book deal for a critic of the Sussexes, while another on January 19 dismissed fabricated stories, affirming Meghan’s publishing leverage. Supporters hail the deal as empowerment; detractors, including conservative media, decry it as “monetizing misery.” Publishing analysts note the risk: Spare needed 1.7 million copies to break even on its $20 million advance; this £50 million sequel demands blockbuster sales—potentially 3-4 million—to profit, factoring royalties, printing, and marketing. Yet, with Harry’s Ukraine visits in September 2025 drawing praise and Meghan’s With Love, Meghan renewed for Season 2, the Sussex brand remains potent. Netflix’s August 2025 renewal—a looser first-look deal post their $100 million 2020 pact—signals continued investment, including a Christmas special and Ugandan documentary.
For the Windsors, this is a stark reminder of the Sussexes’ independence. Harry’s recent defense of Spare in NBC News underscores his resolve: “My conscience is clear,” he said, expressing hope for more time with Charles. But William’s warning to aides suggests a deepening chasm. As the memoir’s 2026 release looms, the royal family braces for revelations that could redefine trust—or destroy it. In the words of one observer, “The spares are writing their own history, and the heirs may not like the ending.” Whether this deal heals old wounds or inflicts new ones, it’s a dramatic pivot in a saga that’s far from over.