NEW YORK – On November 25, 2025, the day after Thanksgiving, a 312-page book hit shelves with the force of a detonation. Nobody’s Girl by Virginia Giuffre is not a “tell-all.” It is a scream that has been trapped in a 14-year-old girl’s throat for over two decades.
In raw, unflinching prose, Giuffre, now 42, describes the moment her childhood ended in the summer of 2000 at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach. She was a towel girl earning $8 an hour when a stylish woman in a British accent approached her outside the spa.
“Ghislaine said I had the perfect look,” Giuffre writes. “She told me Jeffrey had a job for me — reading books to him because his eyes were bad. I was so excited. I thought I’d finally found a way out of the trailer park.”
Within 48 hours she was on Little St. James, Epstein’s private island, being told to undress.

What follows is a catalogue of depravity so methodical it reads like a horror film scripted by lawyers. Giuffre names names (many already public from unsealed court documents, some newly detailed). She describes being “passed around like a plate of fruit” at Epstein’s Manhattan mansion, his New Mexico ranch, on his plane the “Lolita Express,” and in London, Paris, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Prince Andrew in London: “He didn’t even look at me like I was human. I was just a thing to be used.”
Bill Richardson, George Mitchell, Marvin Minsky, Jean-Luc Brunel, Glenn Dubin, Tom Pritzker, and others (all previously identified in court filings) appear in stomach-churning scenes of coercion and violence.
A French modelling agent who held her head underwater in a bathtub until she blacked out.
A Saudi prince who laughed while she bled on white marble.
Epstein and Maxwell watching, directing, photographing, threatening: “If you ever speak, we’ll ruin you. No one will believe a trailer-park whore over us.”
She writes of being choked until she saw stars, of cigarette burns, of being beaten with a belt for crying too loudly, of being forced to recruit other girls because “fresh meat” was always required. She writes of the exact moment she realised she was not a girlfriend — she was property.
“I learned to dissociate,” she says. “I’d float above my body and count the tiles on the ceiling while they did whatever they wanted. Sometimes I prayed to pass out. Passing out was mercy.”
The memoir’s most devastating pages are not the assaults themselves, but the aftermath: the suicide attempts, the years of being branded a liar by powerful PR machines, the 2019 arrest of Epstein followed by his “suicide” that robbed her of a trial, the 2021 Maxwell conviction that still left so many men untouched.
Giuffre writes openly about the night in 2019 when she stood on a bridge in Perth, Australia, ready to jump — only stopped by a text from her youngest son asking when she’d be home for dinner.
“I realised I had to survive for them,” she writes. “But surviving isn’t the same as living.”
The book is already a global phenomenon. Within 24 hours it shot to #1 on Amazon worldwide, outselling the new Sally Rooney and the latest Obama memoir combined. Pre-orders crashed three publishers’ servers. #Nobody’sGirl is trending in 47 countries. Survivors are posting photos of their copies with captions like “I see you, Virginia” and “We believe you.”
In New York, London, and Sydney, women lined up at midnight releases in the rain. One 63-year-old former model told The Guardian outside Barnes & Noble: “I was one of the girls they threw away when I turned 19. I’ve never told anyone. Tonight I’m telling my daughter.”
The men named have responded with the predictable choreography of wealth and power:
Prince Andrew’s office: “These allegations have been denied consistently.”
Bill Richardson’s estate: “These claims were previously litigated and settled.”
A spokesman for one billionaire: “These are recycled, baseless accusations.”
Giuffre expected the denials. She writes in the epilogue:
“They can hire all the lawyers in the world. They can hide behind palace walls and private jets. But every time a girl opens this book and sees her own story in mine, another brick falls from their fortress. The truth is a tide. It always wins.”
She ends with a dedication to every survivor who has ever been called a liar, a whore, an opportunist.
“You were never nobody’s girl,” she writes. “You were always somebody. And now the whole world knows it.”
Nobody’s Girl is in bookstores now. Proceeds go to Giuffre’s Victims Refuse Silence foundation, which has already funded safe houses for 87 trafficking survivors since 2020.
Virginia Giuffre didn’t just survive. She came back swinging — and the whole rotten empire is shaking.
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