Prince Harry's memoir is a huge hit.
In just five days, in France, 85,000 copies have been sold.
Released on January 10, it already requires three reprints.
In the United States, on the day of its launch,
The Substitute
sold 1.4 million copies, a record number for a non-fiction book.
Read alsoPrince Harry's failed charge against the royal family
The first print run was already colossal: 210,000 copies, just for the French market.
But clearly not enough in view of its success.
On January 10, the day of its release in bookstores,
Le Suppléant
was reprinted in 50,000 copies.
The following two days, this figure will be increased to 130,000 reprints.
Since its accidental release in Spain, five days before the official publication,
Le Suppléant has
unleashed passions.
If the distributors feared an overdose, it only lasted a while.
Readers are obviously not tired and are still eager to discover the underside of the British royal family.
In this autobiography, the Duke of Sussex tells it all.
His defloration, his experiments with cannabis and cocaine or the day he allegedly killed 25 Taliban in Afghanistan.
Nothing is silenced, until his strained relationship with his brother William and the aftermath of the death of his mother, Diana.