Sarah Ferguson continues to feel the heat over her controversial ex-husband Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s scandal.
Multiple media outlets have reported that the former Duchess of York’s planned children’s book, “Flora and Ferns: Kindness on the Way,” has been canceled following recent public uproar.
The book was originally scheduled to be published on October 9th, but was pushed back to November 20th, and has reportedly remained completely blank until now.
“It’s not delayed, it’s planned,” one publisher told the Daily Mail. “This is an admission of the inevitable. No one will want to buy it.”
A spokesperson for Mr. Ferguson did not respond to Page Six’s request for comment.
The news comes on the heels of a seemingly endless stream of negative publicity for Mr Ferguson, 66.
Earlier this month, King Charles III stripped Ferguson’s ex-husband, Prince Andrew, of his royal titles due to his brother’s relationship with the late convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.
Andrew, now known as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, was also evicted from the Royal Lodge where he lived with Ferguson.
Ferguson also lost her title as Duchess of York and was kicked out of the Royal Lodge.
The My Story author was married to the former royal from 1986 to 1996 and they have two daughters, Princess Beatrice, 37, and Princess Eugenie, 35.
As the paper previously reported, both Mr Ferguson and Mr Mountbatten-Windsor spent time with Mr Epstein, with the former duchess reportedly receiving a $20,000 loan from the convicted sex offender in the 1980s and sending unsavory emails after publicly criticizing Mr Epstein.
“I know that you feel deeply disappointed by me because of what you have said and read, and for that I must humbly apologize to you and your heart,” she wrote to the man she referred to as “Dear Jeffrey.”
After the emails came to light earlier this year, several charities removed Mr. Ferguson as a patron.
Virginia Giuffre, who was trafficked by Epstein and died by suicide, has long claimed that she was forced to have sex with the former Duke of York.
Although he denied the allegations, he paid Mr. Giuffre a multimillion-dollar settlement.
Page Six exclusively reported that Mr. Ferguson’s friends were “more worried about Sarah than Andrew,” and described Mr. Ferguson, a former patron of the anti-sex trafficker, as “in trouble.”
