Before she took her own life exactly four months ago, on April 24, Virginia Roberts Giuffre was the most famous of all Jeffrey Epstein victims.
She fought in the justice system and won settlements from Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, and Prince Andrew. Giuffre knew where the secrets were buried — and now, from beyond the grave, she will have the last word.
Nobody’s Girl to be released Oct. 21
An “unsparing” memoir by Giuffre will be published this fall, according to publisher Alfred A. Knopf.
“Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice” is scheduled for release Oct. 21, the publisher confirmed to the Associated Press.
Giuffre, who died by suicide in April at age 41, had been working on Nobody’s Girl with author-journalist Amy Wallace and had completed the manuscript for the 400-page book, according to Knopf.
Giuffre’s final wish
Knopf released an email Giuffre sent to Wallace just weeks before her death, stating it was her “heartfelt wish” the memoir be released “regardless” of her circumstances.
“The content of this book is crucial, as it aims to shed light on the systemic failures that allow the trafficking of vulnerable individuals across borders. It is imperative that the truth is understood and that the issues surrounding this topic are addressed, both for the sake of justice and awareness,” Giuffre wrote.
“In the event of my passing, I would like to ensure that NOBODY’S GIRL is still released. I believe it has the potential to impact many lives and foster necessary discussions about these grave injustices.”
A long-awaited book deal
It has been known since 2023 that Giuffre reached a deal “believed to be worth millions” with a publisher.
In the early 2000s, as a teenager, she was recruited by Ghislaine Maxwell at Mar-a-Lago, where she and her father worked. She later said she became a “sex slave,” trafficked to Prince Andrew and other powerful men.
Legacy of a survivor
Giuffre’s story, if told in her own words, will add a new layer to the horrific Epstein saga — one that continues to reverberate years after his death and Maxwell’s conviction.
