Virginia Giuffre, the Epstein survivor who took on some of the world’s most connected figures, has her full story hitting shelves months after her tragic death — and insiders say it’s already rattling cages from Palm Beach to Buckingham Palace.

The book, “Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice,” landed Oct. 21 via Alfred A. Knopf, clocking in at 400 pages of no-holds-barred accounts from Giuffre’s teenage years trapped in Jeffrey Epstein’s orbit. Co-written with journalist Amy Wallace, it was finished before Giuffre’s suicide in April at age 41 on her Australian farm, but she made it crystal clear in emails: Publish it no matter what.

Giuffre, born Virginia Roberts, didn’t mince words. She details getting recruited at 16 while working at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago — yeah, the same spot where her dad had a gig — by Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s right-hand woman who’s now doing 20 years for trafficking. From there, it’s a whirlwind of private jets, island hideaways, and encounters with power players who allegedly treated young girls like disposable props.

Central to the chaos: Prince Andrew. Giuffre sticks to her guns, claiming three separate hookups, including one wild night in London where Maxwell played dress-up coordinator, turning her into “Cinderella” for the royal. Another allegedly went down on Epstein’s infamous Little St. James island with a bunch of other underage girls who barely spoke English. Andrew settled out of court with her for millions in 2022 and has always denied everything, but the book piles on fresh details that have royal watchers buzzing — and reportedly led to him ditching his titles for good just days before release.

It’s not just the Brits feeling the heat. Giuffre drops claims of a brutal encounter with a “well-known prime minister” that left her begging Epstein not to send her back. She also hints at broader circles, though Trump gets a pass — she describes him as friendly during her Mar-a-Lago days and doesn’t pin any wrongdoing on him.

But the memoir kicks off way before Epstein. Giuffre lays bare a childhood nightmare in Florida: molestation starting at 7, family neglect, even allegations against her own dad and a family friend swapping daughters for a night. She calls herself the “perfect victim” — broken early, easy to groom.

Escape came at 19 when she bolted to Australia, married Robert Giuffre, and started a family. The book paints him as her savior at first, the guy who pulled her from the madness. But drama erupted posthumously: In her final months, amid a nasty divorce and custody fight, Giuffre accused him of years of physical abuse and wanted revisions. Publishers hesitated, family pushed back hard, saying the rosy marriage portrayal undermined her credibility.

Knopf caved to pressure, teaming with Giuffre’s brothers to tweak the final version — adding context in a foreword by Wallace explaining the late changes. Her siblings insisted: “The full story needs to be told.”

Wallace, in interviews, says Giuffre saw the book as her legacy — a weapon to help even one survivor. Excerpts already leaked: Haunting Louvre memories before testifying, fears she’d “die a sex slave,” and that gut-punch closer about a world where girls get help fast and fight back.

Critics are split. Some hail it as courageous, a devastating takedown of elite enablers. Others, like Ghislaine’s brother Ian Maxwell, warn not to swallow it whole, pointing to Giuffre’s past flip-flops on accusations — remember the Alan Dershowitz drama where she later said she “may have been mistaken”?

Sales are skyrocketing anyway, hitting No. 1 on bestseller lists amid renewed Epstein scrutiny — client lists, Trump ties, the works. Prince Andrew’s camp stayed mum, but sources say he’s lawyered up again.

Giuffre’s brother Sky Roberts told outlets the family backs the book now, flaws and all, because Virginia fought for truth. In her words: If it sparks real change, exposes the “systemic failures” letting trafficking thrive, it’s worth it.

Reviews pour in — The Guardian calls it a “devastating exposé,” NYT says it might “break your heart.” RadarOnline summed up the damning bits: Rape claims, child trafficking, that infamous photo with Andrew’s arm around her waist.

Bottom line: Giuffre’s gone, but her voice is louder than ever. Publishers who dragged feet? Media that balked? They’re eating crow as copies fly off shelves. This one’s reshaping conversations on power, abuse, and who really gets protected.

The fallout? Just starting. Excerpts hint at more names, more locations, more questions about how deep the web went. Giuffre ended with hope: A world where victims become heroes. Whether “Nobody’s Girl” delivers that shift — or just more headlines — time will tell.