The biography of Boris Johnson, which is titled “Unleashed” (Untied in Spanish), is officially published on October 10, although extracts on a wide variety of topics are already circulating. One especially affects the former Queen Elizabeth II.
In the book, in addition to thinking about invading Holland to steal vaccines against COVID-19, he dedicates several pages to the former Queen of England, who supposedly died of natural causes on September 8, 2022, and that in the book the former premier British contradicts and reveals the “true” cause.
What did Elizabeth II die of?
In one of the last images of Elizabeth II you could see her right hand bruised while greeting the then prime minister, Liz Truss. It was speculated that the Queen had had an IV in place and the medication had burned her veins, hence not only the bruised hand, but also the possible punctures from other medications.
Natural causes, since she was 96 years old, was always the official cause of the death of the British regent. In his memoir, Johnson states that he had known for a year that the Queen had bone cancer.
What Boris Johnson’s book says
“Edward Young, his private secretary, tried to prepare me. “He had known for a year or more that he had bone cancer, and his doctors were worried that at any moment he could go into a sharp decline.”
“She appeared pale and more hunched over, and had dark bruises on her hands and wrists, probably from drips or injections. But her mind, as Edward had also said, was completely untouched by her illness and from time to time in our conversation she still showed that big white smile with its sudden, spirit-lifting beauty.”
“As Edward Young later explained to me, she knew everything (about her illness) the summer she was going to die, but she was determined to endure and fulfill her last duty: to oversee the peaceful and orderly transition from one government to the next. and, he waited to add another outgoing prime minister to his record.”
Been out & about signing my book today. And intriguingly I’ve just had a call from my publishers telling me there’s been a sudden uplift in sales which is lovely. It’s a biography of the late Queen: “Elizabeth: an intimate portrait”. I was lucky enough to first meet HM in 1968. pic.twitter.com/XzxFHKlNrR
— Gyles Brandreth (@GylesB1) January 10, 2023
The royal biographer
Related news
He historian Gyles Brandreth He already stated in the book he wrote about Isabel II (An Intimate Portrait), which the queen had cancer. He had heard that the queen had a form of myeloma: bone marrow cancer. The most common symptom of myeloma is bone pain, especially in the pelvis and lower back, and multiple myeloma is a disease that often affects the elderly.
Follow the Diario AS channel on WhatsAppwhere you will find all the sport in a single space: the current news of the day, the agenda with the latest news of the most important sporting events, the most outstanding images, the opinion of the best AS brands, reports, videos, and some humor from time to time.