welcome to special edition of 360: the harry interview, the special interview i did with cbs 60 minutes. tonight, the interview and the fallout from it and what harry reveals in his new book, which comes out tuesday. prince harry may have stepped back from his royal duties, but he and his wife, the duchess of sussex, haven t stepped back from the spotlight. now the 38-year-old prince harry is telling his own story in his new memoir, spare, a nod to his backup role in the line of succession. the book is a stunning break with royal protocol. it s deeply personal, and it s an account of prince harry s decades-long struggle with grief after the death of his mother, princess diana, and his fractured relationship with his father and his brother, prince william, the heir to his spare. you write about a contentious meeting you had with him in 2021. you said, i looked at will, really looked at him maybe for the first time since we were boy, his familiar scowl, his alarming bal
tried experimental treatments. you write in the book about psychedelics. i would never recommend people doing this recreation nally. but doing it with the right people, if you are suffering from a huge amount of loss, grief, or trauma, then these things have a way of working as a medicine. they showed you something. what did they show you? for me, they cleared the wind screen, the windshield, the misery of loss. it cleared away this idea that i had in my head that my mother, that i needed to cry to prove to my mother that i missed her. when in fact, all she wanted was for me to be happy. we ll continue part two of my interview shortly. but first joining us now, mags max foster, kate williams, and bonnie greer, noted author, play wright, and deputy chair of the british museum. max, let s start with you. this is a two part interview we did with 60 minutes, and one