Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir, Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, which was completed before she died, is set to come out on Tuesday

 

Virginia Giuffre took her own life in April(Image: TNS)

 

Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir, which was completed before she died by suicide in April, is set for release on October 21.

 

The book, co-written by author-journalist Amy Wallace, is titled Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice.

 

It offers an expanded account but few new revelations about Virginia’s longstanding claims to have been sexually trafficked by the late financier to billionaires Jeffrey Epstein, politicians and King Charles’ younger brother, Prince Andrew.

 

Virginia, who reached an out-of-court of settlement with the Duke of York in February 2022, which resulted in the civil case being dismissed the following month, told her story in interviews and lawsuits for 16 years.

 

But in her book, she wanted to “provide context where it has been sorely lacking” while revisiting her allegations involving the men who socialized with Epstein.

 

Here are some of the bombshells set to be revealed in the memoir.

 

Prince Andrew saw sex with Virginia as ‘birthright’

 

Virginia claimed Prince Andrew was ‘entitled'(Image: Getty Images)

 

In the book, Virginia details alleged encounters with Andrew, who she sued in 2021, claiming that they had sex when she was 17.

 

Andrew vehemently denied her claims and the two settled the lawsuit in 2022.

 

According to The Sun, the duke was “entitled” and saw having sex with his accuser as his “birthright.”

 

The author claimed in her memoir that Andrew said “thank you” in a “clipped British accent” after their alleged encounter.

 

She is also said to describe how Ghislaine Maxwell praised her the morning after the first encounter and told her, “You did well, the prince had fun.”

 

The book’s blurb reads, “In 2011, Virginia Roberts Giuffre hit the headlines as Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell’s most outspoken victim: the woman whose decision to speak out helped send both serial abusers to prison and whose photograph with Prince Andrew catalysed his fall from grace.

 

This is the powerful story of an ordinary girl who would grow up to confront adversity and trauma of the darkest form, yet found the strength to move forwards, reclaim her voice and shine a light on evil – advocating for others and fighting for a safer, fairer world.”

 

She alleged that Epstein paid her $15,000 for the meeting.

 

Virginia is said to describe Andrew as “friendly enough, but still entitled” in her book.

 

Infamous photo

 

Virginia with Prince Andrew and Ghislaine Maxwell(Image: US District Court – Southern Dis)

 

In the book, Virginia is said to recount giving Epstein a Kodak FunSaver camera from her room, which he used to take the infamous picture of her and Andrew – allegedly on March 13, 2001.

 

“My mom would never forgive me if I met someone as famous as Prince Andrew and didn’t pose for a picture,” she writes, according to the BBC.

 

“I ran to get a Kodak FunSaver from my room, then returned and handed it to Epstein.

 

I remember the prince putting his arm around my waist as Maxwell grinned beside me.

 

Epstein snapped the photo.” Describing the image of her and Andrew, she is said to add, “We had no idea of the commotion this photo would later cause.”

 

Taking tranquilizers

 

Virginia shared some details to describe what working for Epstein was like(Image: US District Court – Southern Dis)

 

Virginia also claimed in her book that she was taking tranquilizers to cope with her life working for Epstein.

 

She claimed that she sometimes took as many as eight Xanax a day.

 

She also explained why she didn’t leave “Epstein’s lair even after we knew what he wanted from us.”

 

As reported by the BBC, Virginia writes in her memoir, “How can you complain about being abused, some have asked, when you could so easily have stayed away?

 

But that stance discounts what many of us had been through before we encountered Epstein, as well as how good he was at spotting girls whose wounds made them vulnerable.

 

“Several of us had been molested or raped as children; many of us were poor or even homeless. We were girls who no one cared about, and Epstein pretended to care.”

 

Trump ‘couldn’t have been friendlier’

 

Donald and Melania Trump with Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell in 2000(Image: Getty Images)

 

Speculation that Epstein was involved in a global sex trafficking ring continues to cause headaches for the Trump administration, which has been under pressure to publicly release more records related to the FBI’s investigations of Epstein and Maxwell.

 

Even Virginia, in the concluding pages of the book, asks, “Where are those videotapes the FBI confiscated from Epstein’s houses?

 

And why haven’t they led to the prosecution of any more abusers?”

 

In the memoir, she describes meeting Trump once at Mar-a-Lago, where her father worked, but doesn’t accuse Trump of wrongdoing.

 

She said Trump “couldn’t have been friendlier,” adding that he offered to help her find babysitting work.

 

She mentions that she was once present for dinners Epstein had with former President Bill Clinton and former Vice President Al Gore and his wife, Tipper, but she also didn’t accuse them of any wrongdoing.