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New Book Says King Charles Told Princess Diana He's Gay So She Wouldn't Have Sex With Him

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New Book Says King Charles Told Princess Diana He's Gay So She Wouldn't Have Sex With Him

Royal author Christopher Andersen is back in the news with a brand new book about the royal family that makes outrageous claims. The King: The Life of Charles III explicitly covers the early 1990s, when the marriage between King Charles and Princess Diana was falling apart.

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The book offers a lot of information that's new to most of us, including Christopher's claim that at one point, Charles told Diana he's gay so she would stop trying to have sex with him.

Christopher also describes the relationship between the two as "highly combustible" and details that royal protection officers were often worried the fights between the pair would become physical.

In one section of the book, the author writes that Diana often mocked the physical appearance of Camilla Parker-Bowles, and alleges the late Princess of Wales was often "hurling epithets and mocking her husband’s obsession with the dreary-looking Camilla."

He continues by claiming that Diana would follow Charles "down hallways, up staircases and from room to room," asking, "Why won’t you sleep with me?"

According to the book, Charles "had for all intents and purposes unilaterally called a halt to their sexual relationship" and told his wife sarcastically, "I don’t know, dear. I think I might be gay."

The book also claims that at one point, Charles tried to remind Diana who he is in the world and asked, "‘Do you know who I am?’"

She's said to have replied, "Diana answered that he was a '[expletive] animal.'"

Diana also reportedly told Charles she didn't believe he would ever be king. As the book claims, she shouted, "You will never be King!

Protection officers in the pair's home were constantly worried their fights would escalate to physical violence, the book claims.

Christopher writes, "The clashes between Diana and Charles were now so raw that ‘violence seemed inevitable.'" Their home had a number of weapons, which reportedly concerned officers.

He concludes: "The detectives in charge of protecting members of the royal family were deeply concerned that ‘in the heat of anger,’ any one of these could be used to commit suicide, homicide or both." 

Reference: Little Things.com : Stephanie Kaloi (she/her/hers

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