Kinga Philipps is back with us for part two of our investigation into the legend of the lost city of Akakor.\xa0 In this episode, we look closer at the facts in this case, attempting to separate them from the fiction.\xa0 Kinga has a specific and knowledgeable insight into Tatunca Nara\u2019s point of view as she and J.J. Kelley interviewed him at his home in Barcelos, Amazonas, in 2019 for their Travel Channel show, Lost in the Wild.\xa0 In the 1980s, at least three people hired Tatunca as a guide to find Akakor.\xa0 Two were never seen again, and one was found with a bullet hole in the back of their skull.\xa0 Did they insist on venturing into the jungle alone, as Tatunca claimed?\xa0 What became of the journalist Karl Brugger, whose book The Chronicle of Akakor could be considered the catalyst to this series of events?\xa0 Is this mystery more natural, supernatural, or criminal at its core?\xa0 Whatever the truth at the heart of this darkness, the fact is that an incredible account, a fantastic fable, mere words can spark quests and tragedy.
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