Scottish Daily Mail

What are we likely to make of Harry’s book?

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THE look on Prince Harry’s face on the cover says it all. The tiny smirk and slightly narrowed eyes scream of peevish vindictive­ness to me — and if the book proves as damaging as predicted, he should be stripped of his royal titles.

LyNNE BIRKETT, Wakefield, W. yorks.

THE title of Harry’s book — Spare — could be an acronym for Selfish, Peevish And Ridiculous­ly Entitled.

R.G. PURChES, Bristol.

AROUND here, if someone is ‘going a bit spare’ it means they are losing the plot.

ERIC CRAGGS, Shildon, Co Durham.

FUNERALS are an opportunit­y to say a final farewell to a loved one. What would the Duke of Sussex now feel if he had not been in attendance at his mother’s funeral?

STEVE EDWARDS, Bishop’s Stortford, herts.

THE title may be derived from ‘the heir and the spare’, but most folk may think of an expression about spare items at weddings. I hardly know which is more appropriat­e.

A. P. LODGE, Winchester, hants.

IT IS dreadful to lose a parent, but many millions of us have experience­d it. I’d remind Harry that most of us were proud to follow our parents on their final journey. It was a privilege, not something to whinge about.

PAM BONDING, Folkestone, Kent.

POOR Harry. Will someone please tell him to stop digging.

ALAN JACOBS, Biddenham, Beds.

IF HARRY’S book is divisive, we won’t be taking his side — and if it’s too spiteful, our opinion of him will go down even farther.

BARBARA ThOMAS, Billingshu­rst, W. Sussex.

THE title should have been Spare Us. When it appears in Poundland (if it is willing to take it), I might buy it to use it as a doorstop.

BRIAN BLAKE, Maidstone, Kent.

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