Alfred A. Knopf said it will publish the posthumous memoir of Virginia Roberts Giuffre—one of the most prominent accusers of Jeffrey Epstein—on 21 October. The book, entitled “Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice,” was completed before Giuffre died by suicide in April at age 41 and runs about 400 pages. Knopf described the manuscript as “unsparing,” promising new, fact-checked details about Giuffre’s years under Epstein’s control and her interactions with his associates, including Britain’s Prince Andrew and former socialite Ghislaine Maxwell. An email Giuffre sent weeks before her death asked that the memoir be released “regardless” of her circumstances, saying it could help expose systemic failures that enable human trafficking. Giuffre alleged she was recruited as a teenager by Maxwell and sexually abused by Epstein, Prince Andrew and others; the Duke of York has consistently denied wrongdoing but paid an undisclosed sum to settle Giuffre’s 2022 civil suit. Epstein died in a New York jail in 2019 while awaiting trial, and Maxwell is serving a 20-year U.S. sentence for sex-trafficking minors. Giuffre began working on the memoir with journalist Amy Wallace in 2021 after securing a seven-figure publishing deal. The project later moved with Wallace to Knopf when the editor joined the imprint last year. Knopf says the book has been legally vetted and hopes its release will add momentum to global discussions on victim advocacy and anti-trafficking reforms.
Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre wrote a memoir. Months after her death, it’s coming out https://t.co/cAdNY54k6H
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Six mois après sa mort, l'accusatrice du prince Andrew dans l'affaire Epstein publie ses mémoires ➡️ https://t.co/PzQBzXFOpH https://t.co/QeynGah1uc