I didn't want to put this in the news and pictures thread. But there is some interesting points about William in the new Robert Hardman book. I can't quite work out if they have come from William's side thinking it makes him look "just like a regular bloke" or from others trying to make him seem a bit unintelligent, uninterested and a bit of a philistine.
https://www.dailymail.co....aining-Prince-George.htmlWithin the offices of both the King and the new Prince of Wales, it is accepted that both will make changes according to their own tastes and personalities. Whereas the King likes to assemble panels of experts around him, for instance, his son does not.
'William will say: 'Don't get me a meeting with an academic.' He might want to meet a brilliant scientist who is doing something amazing but he doesn't seek intellectual company,' says one of those who has worked closely with him.
Prince Charles may have been happy to wade into big social issues of the day with a provocative speech or foreword to a book, or by bending the ears of ministers.
Now in his 40s, Prince William has steered a more conventional and cautious path. Within the Palace, some see traces of an earnest, dutiful George VI.
As one of his senior advisers puts it: 'He is one of the least ideological people I have met.'
Prince William gets most of his news from online sources such as the BBC website and briefings from staff. He prefers cogent, bullet-point memos to the big bundles of documents the King likes to wade through.
When it comes to leisure, the King has inherited his late father's love of reading. Prince William, by contrast, will dip into books for information, less so for pleasure.
Asked to name the Prince's favourite author, one official replies diplomatically: 'He's a box-set guy.' Superhero movies are, apparently, a particular favourite, especially Deadpool and all things Batman-related. 'He just likes action flicks,' says one friend.
What may mark out the future King William V as a 'change-maker' is not what he does, so much as what he may not do.
According to a close adviser, he is 'very nervous' of being seen to presume he is the future head of the Commonwealth. 'It's something he thinks about a lot.'
However, one idea which he certainly does not favour, says a source, is the idea of being a 'co-head' (with a politician).
The prospect of there being a future monarch who is not head of the Commonwealth is not nearly as big a leap of the royal imagination, however, as having a monarch who is not Supreme Governor of the Church of England.
In royal circles, it is no secret that he does not share the King's sense of the spiritual, let alone the late Queen's unshakeable devotion to the Anglican church.
'His father is very spiritual and happy to talk about faith, but the Prince is not,' says a senior Palace figure. 'He doesn't go to church every Sunday, but then nor do the large majority of the country. He might go at Christmas and Easter, but that's it.
'He very much respects the institutions, but he is not instinctively comfortable in a faith environment.'
Prince William, however, is said to be closer to the late Prince Philip than to his father on farming issues.
According to one adviser, this is especially true when it comes to the merits of organic farming.
Whereas the King is a purist on the matter, his son is more agnostic, given the difficulties facing many farmers in seeking to attain organic status.
Both, however, have a strong admiration for what each other has achieved in terms of keeping the environment to the fore.