Christopher Andersen, author of "The King," explained why the show must go on for the reigning British monarch. Princess Anne’s daughter was said to be worried about the royal’s workload even before the matriarch was sidelined by a horse-related injury. On June 24, the palace announced that the 73-year-old sustained minor injuries and a concussion after an incident on the Gatcombe Park estate in southwest England.
Her medical team said her head injuries were consistent with an impact from a horse’s head or legs. It was reported that Anne suffered temporary memory loss. Fox News Digital reached out to Buckingham Palace for comment.
PRINCESS ANNE LEAVES HOSPITAL, RETURNS HOME AFTER SUFFERING CONCUSSION FROM HORSE-RELATED INCIDENT "When Zara saw her mother lying in a hospital bed suffering from a severe concussion and memory loss, she was understandably shaken," Christopher Andersen, author of "The King," told Fox News Digital. (Owen Humphreys-WPA Pool/Getty Images) "For the last several years, Zara Tindall has been worried that the palace has been relying too heavily on her septuagenarian mother," Christopher Andersen, author of "The King," claimed to Fox News Digital. "She has a point," said Andersen.
"Princess Anne is routinely described as the hardest working royal, racking up 457 engagements last year alone. She has always been fondly thought of as inexhaustible — even invincible. When Zara saw her mother lying in a hospital bed suffering from a severe concussion an.