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Search resuls for: "Scobie’s"


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As book rollouts go, the one for Omid Scobie’s latest offering about the British royal family, “Endgame,” has been a hot mess — splashy, gaudy, tantalizing but ultimately a bit withholding — which is to say, par for the course for a putative tell-all account of the world’s most covered, least decoded family. The withholding part involves an unconfirmed, thoroughly radioactive nugget that turned up in the Dutch edition of Mr. Scobie’s book, published on Tuesday: the identity of two members of the royal family who once reportedly expressed concerns about the skin color of the unborn child of Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan. Mr. Scobie’s Dutch publisher, Xander, quickly withdrew the book from shelves and online sites in the Netherlands at the behest of the author and his agent, citing an unspecified “mistake” that it said would be corrected in time for the book to go back on sale on Dec. 8. The family members are not identified in either the British or American editions, which were published by imprints of HarperCollins. It all led to a nursery school’s worth of peekaboo headlines in London tabloids on Wednesday.
Persons: rollouts, Omid, , Scobie’s, Prince Harry, Meghan, Mr, Xander Organizations: HarperCollins Locations: Scobie’s Dutch, Netherlands, Amsterdam, London
“Endgame,” or “Eindstrijd” in Dutch, the latest book from British writer Omid Scobie was released this week. The Dutch translation was published in the Netherlands by Xander Uitgevers, which said it was “temporarily withdrawing” the book from sale in a statement on its website Tuesday. “An error occurred in the Dutch translation and is currently being rectified,” adds the statement. GET OUR FREE ROYAL NEWSLETTER • Sign up to CNN’s Royal News, a weekly dispatch bringing you the inside track on the royal family, what they are up to in public and what’s happening behind palace walls. Neither the royal household nor the Sussexes have commented officially on any claims that have emerged since Scobie’s latest book published.
Persons: Prince Harry, Meghan’s, Omid Scobie, Xander Uitgevers, , Archie, Duchess, Sussex, Oprah Winfrey, Harry, , ” Meghan, Winfrey, Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip, Scobie, Buckingham Organizations: CNN, PA Media, CNN’s Royal, RTL Locations: Netherlands, Windsor, Buckingham Palace
Another Battle Royale in the Windsor War
  + stars: | 2023-11-26 | by ( Eva Wolchover | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Here Scobie picks up with the death of Queen Elizabeth II, questioning whether her hapless eldest son and his heirs have what it takes to run the family business. “Tone-deaf, racist and financially reckless” are three charges hurled at the monarchy, “but when Queen Elizabeth II was at the helm she managed to keep much of it at bay,” he writes. Over the course of her umpteen-year reign the queen earned a certain amount of good will for herself and “the Institution,” largely because her silence and inscrutability read as comparatively dignified. Scobie cites falling approval ratings (down to 47 percent after the publication of Prince Harry’s “Spare”) and a smattering of protesters waving “Not My King” signs at Charles’s public engagements. These days, warts-and-all tell-alls seem to be as integral to the Windsor brand as weddings, jubilees and blockbuster funerals.
Persons: Scobie, Queen Elizabeth II, , King Charles, Prince Harry’s “, Charles, Camilla’s Locations: Britain, Windsor
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