Published posthumously on October 21, 2025, Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice stands as Virginia Giuffre’s raw, unflinching testament to a life marked by trauma, exploitation, and unyielding courage. Co-written with journalist Amy Wallace before Giuffre’s tragic suicide in April 2025 at age 41, the book details her grooming and abuse starting at 16, offering harrowing new insights into the Epstein-Maxwell trafficking ring.

Giuffre recounts being spotted by Ghislaine Maxwell in 2000 while working at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort. Maxwell, posing as a benevolent figure, lured her into Epstein’s world with promises of opportunity. What followed was systematic sexual abuse: Giuffre describes Epstein and Maxwell coercing her into “massages” that escalated into assaults, training her to recruit others, and trafficking her to powerful men. She feared she might “die a sex slave,” trapped in a cycle of fear and manipulation.
Central to the memoir are Giuffre’s allegations against Prince Andrew. She details three alleged sexual encounters in 2001, when she was 17. The first occurred at Maxwell’s London townhouse after a nightclub visit, where Andrew purportedly sweated profusely while dancing. Giuffre claims Maxwell instructed her to “do for him what you do for Epstein.” The second was in New York; the third, an orgy on Epstein’s private island involving Andrew, Epstein, and eight other young girls who appeared underage and non-English speaking. Andrew, she writes, acted entitled, believing sex with her was his “birthright.” He has vehemently denied all claims, settling out-of-court in 2022 without admitting wrongdoing.
Giuffre also reveals prior childhood molestation, an ectopic pregnancy possibly linked to the trafficking, and Epstein-Maxwell’s alleged plans to use her as a surrogate. The book spares no detail of the physical and emotional toll—bruises, weight loss, despair—while highlighting her escape at 19, remarriage, and advocacy for survivors.
Nobody’s Girl has sold over a million copies in two months, becoming a #1 New York Times bestseller. It reignited scrutiny, contributing to King Charles III stripping Andrew of remaining titles in late 2025. Giuffre’s voice—intimate, fierce, defiant—exposes elite complicity and institutional failures. Though she didn’t live to see its impact, her memoir endures as a powerful call for justice, affirming that victims are made, not born, and inspiring safer worlds for others.
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