A stunned Britain woke to rumors of Sarah Ferguson, the former Duchess of York, inking a rumored $14 million memoir deal to “set the record straight” on her tangled ties to Jeffrey Epstein—potentially torching her ex-husband Prince Andrew in the process—only to shatter as unsubstantiated gossip.

Tabloid reports in late November 2025 claimed Ferguson, facing financial strain after losing her title and Royal Lodge home amid Andrew’s Epstein fallout, was “shopping” a tell-all aiming for a $14 million advance (£11 million), rivaling Prince Harry’s Spare. Insiders allegedly said she’d reveal royal “backstabbing” and scandals, “no matter what it does to Andrew.”
No deal has materialized; Ferguson’s team denied active negotiations, calling reports “speculative.” Her 2011 memoir Finding Sarah exists, but no 2025 project is confirmed. A children’s book was pulped in November over renewed Epstein scrutiny—2011 emails calling him “supreme friend” despite public disavowal.
The rumor preyed on real pressures: Ferguson’s Epstein debt repayment (£15,000 from him in 2010) and charity patronages lost in 2025. Andrew’s title revocation October 30 deepened their isolation. As Epstein Files Transparency Act disclosures concluded December 19—no bombshells—the hoax amplified distrust: financial desperation fueling fiction.
Giuffre’s Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025) exposed Andrew’s alleged assaults; Ferguson’s silence endures. The “deal”—raw wishful scandal—ensured Britain’s stunned hush: truth unburied, rumors buried.
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