Meghan Markle is looking to elaborate further on the royal racist row in her own upcoming memoir that she’s rumored to have in the works, according to a royal expert.
Earlier this month, the Dutch translation of Omid Scobie’s explosive tell-all biography, “Endgame: Inside the Royal Family and the Monarchy’s Fight for Survival,” named the royals who allegedly made a “racist” remark about the Sussexes’ son Archie.
The book unmasked her father-in-law, King Charles, and sister-in-law, Kate Middleton, as the royals who allegedly questioned Archie’s skin color.
And according to royal expert Kinsey Schofield, Markle could be looking to set the record straight in an upcoming written project she’s been rumored to be working on.
“There are serious fan theories that this is a strategy so that Meghan is able to elaborate in her published book without the backlash of the big reveal, without the palace coming after her,” Schofield told Talk TV.
“She can say the information’s already out, ‘I just wanted to get my side of the story out there.’”
After Prince Harry’s bombshell tell-all “Spare” hit the shelves in January, it’s been reported that the Duchess of Sussex is looking to release a similar project herself.
Schofield said that Scobie’s book has cleared the way for Markle to openly discuss the royals in the ongoing race row.
The bombshell book was quickly pulled from shelves in the Netherlands following the snafu.
The royals have not responded to the allegations — or any claims made in the book — and Scobien blamed a Dutch “translation error” made by the publisher.
However, the translator responsible for the book’s Dutch version has disputed his claim.
Several experts have urged the Sussexes to end their “deafening silence” and speak out in defense of Charles and Kate — advice they’ve decided to ignore.
The Sussexes signed a lucrative four-book deal with Penguin Random House in 2021.
It wouldn’t be Markle’s first written project if the rumors are true.
Markle is already a published author after releasing her children’s book, titled “The Bench,” last year.
Harry, for his part, saw “Spare” become the fastest-selling nonfiction book of all time since its release on Jan. 10.
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