Prince Harry's book was predicted to rival J.K. Rowling, but it seems the boy who was spare won’t be outshining the boy who lived anytime soon. 📖
When it came to books about Harry, it was predicted to rival J.K. Rowling’s epics.
“I think the hype has been very close to Harry Potter. [For that], we did have the lines but I think maybe because it was a children’s book, there were people more unencumbered to express their emotions for a book and therefore more keen to come out early and line up. – had not changed her perception of the royal family, but added: “Maybe at some point, [Harry] might regret it.”
Prince Harry’s book publisher said in a statement the book had become the UK’s fastest-selling non-fiction book. But Claire White, who was working at Dymocks on Melbourne’s Collins Street when the book was released at 10am, said about noon that the interest [was] lower than anticipated. Steven Hill, a 48-year-old holidaymaker from Tamworth in regional NSW, didn’t buy the book and said many might skip reading it because he felt it wasn’t a positive, upbeat story.
Book shopper Steven Hill was one of many to ignore Prince Harry’s book upon its release on Wednesday.“I just wanted to see from his point of view, what his perspective is on a lot of things that have been going on over the last couple of decades,” he said.
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