Virginia Giuffre’s voice isn’t silenced just because she’s gone. The late Epstein and Prince Andrew accuser’s final wish — that her memoir be published without censorship — is now reality, and insiders claim it’s set to drop some heavy names, including none other than Henry Kissinger.
Daily Soap Dish has learned that after a bruising six-month courtroom slugfest, Giuffre’s publishers scored a win that will allow her book, Nobody’s Girl, to include Kissinger and other political heavyweights who were previously off-limits. The legendary diplomat and former Secretary of State, who died in 2023 at the age of 100, will reportedly be identified in the pages of the tell-all.
Prince Andrew Accuser Virginia Giuffre’s Explosive Posthumous Memoir to Name Henry Kissinger After Bitter Legal Battle
Sources say the legal fight to keep Kissinger out was “intense” and dragged on for months — but with him no longer around to sue, lawyers couldn’t block his name. One insider hinted the revelations might also be “deeply uncomfortable” for Donald Trump, whose history with Epstein has been scrutinized for years.
Giuffre, who tragically took her own life at 41 this past April, was adamant that her memoir see the light of day. In emails to her publisher before her death, she insisted Nobody’s Girl be released no matter what happened to her, calling it her chance to expose the “systemic failures” that allow sex trafficking to thrive.
The book is expected to dive into Giuffre’s years of abuse at the hands of Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, the disturbing details of her relationship with Prince Andrew, and new allegations against a roster of political and social elites. Her family has already braced the public for revelations that could reignite outrage over Epstein’s still-shrouded network.
Trump, who once claimed Epstein “stole” Giuffre from him when she worked at Mar-a-Lago as a teen, could face fresh backlash when the memoir hits shelves this October. Giuffre’s relatives have publicly blasted the former president for reducing their sister to an “object,” and critics say his administration’s handling of the Epstein files only deepened suspicion that powerful names were being protected.
As for Maxwell, currently serving time, her shadow looms large throughout the book. Giuffre’s loved ones called her a “monster,” slamming backroom meetings between her lawyers and Justice Department officials that they fear could lead to leniency.
For Giuffre, Nobody’s Girl was more than a memoir — it was a parting shot at the system she believed failed her and countless others. Now, with publication set for mid-October, the world is about to hear her story in full, uncensored, and with names that were once too powerful to print.
