This is a non-stop book about the Windsors. Tom Quinn picks up on his new title Gilded Youth the train crash that caused Meghan Markle leave his native United States, enter The Firm and live on the other side of the historic walls of Buckingham. An experience that left her very “disappointed”, according to the author, citing a person who worked with the duchess. So much so that Meghan dropped that some rules of protocol at Kensington Palace seemed “absurd” to her, she publishes Daily Mirror. These revelations coincide with the announcement of the invitation to Charles III to his son Harry and his wife, Meghan, to attend his coronation. It will be May 1 at Westminster Abbey in London.
For a 21st century woman like Meghan Markle, modern, feminist and hard-working, who symbolizes equality and breaking the glass ceiling, having the obligation to report in advance when she left the palace and inform where she was going and when she would return It was real stress. She felt controlled. “Meghan hates feeling controlled by protocol,” a former House adviser told the newspaper. However, for the Kensington staff that “absolutely essential” information was part of her job for security reasons.
Curious in the book the chapter in which the author compares the landing of Kate Middleton into royalty with Meghan’s.
Both when they arrived were two women outside the palace and outside the aristocracy. Kate fit the rules better and adapted better to the palace because “She doesn’t have Meghan’s messianic tendencies”added the same source. Tom Quinn does not let it go unnoticed that the former actress wanted and wanted something different for her children, more freedom and more privacy. Without giving it much thought, the former adviser slips that the children of the Princes of Wales are “very conventional”, as if taken “from 1950”.