Published on October 21, 2025, Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice stands as Virginia Giuffre’s final, unflinching testament. Completed before her suicide in April 2025 at age 41, the book—co-written with journalist Amy Wallace—details the brutal exploitation she suffered at the hands of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, including chilling accounts of alleged abuse involving both Epstein and Prince Andrew.

Giuffre recounts being recruited at 16 while working at Mar-a-Lago, groomed by Maxwell, and trafficked into Epstein’s world of sadomasochistic sex. She describes Epstein subjecting her to acts causing excruciating pain, leaving her praying to black out. At the center of her allegations are three alleged sexual encounters with Prince Andrew, then 41, when she was 17 or 18—claims he has vehemently denied, settling her 2021 lawsuit in 2022 with a multimillion-dollar payment and charity donation, without admitting liability.
In vivid detail, Giuffre recalls Maxwell excitedly telling her in March 2001: “Just like Cinderella, you are going to meet a handsome prince!” That night in London, after dining and clubbing at Tramp—where Andrew allegedly sweated profusely—she claims he had sex with her at Maxwell’s home. Andrew guessed her age correctly as 17, noting his daughters were slightly younger, prompting Maxwell’s chilling joke: “We will have to trade her in soon.”
The memoir alleges two more encounters: one in New York, and a particularly disturbing “orgy” on Epstein’s Little St. James island involving Epstein himself and approximately eight other young women, many appearing underage and non-English speaking. Giuffre portrays Andrew as “entitled—as if he believed having sex with me was his birthright,” showing no remorse. Epstein allegedly paid her $15,000 after one encounter, praising her performance.
These revelations paint a picture of remorseless predation enabled by power and wealth. Giuffre feared dying “a sex slave,” yet escaped at 19, later founding advocacy groups and donating settlements to survivors. Her words expose not just individual acts, but a network of enablers indifferent to her trauma.
As the book reignites scrutiny—coinciding with Andrew relinquishing titles and calls for further royal action—Giuffre’s voice endures, demanding accountability from those who allegedly abused without remorse.
Leave a Reply