Meet the Acephali, the headless ones of African legend: walkers with eyes and mouths in their chests, voices rising where most keep a heart. Mapmakers and scholars placed them on the edges of Egypt, Libya, Nubia, and Ethiopia, while Rome called them Blemmyes. Their cousins appear across Asia in tales of Kabandha and Xingtian. Not mere monsters, they guard the border between known and unknown, a challenge to certainty. Hear the story of Almon, who sang stones to tears, and explore powers, flaws, and meanings that linger in woodcarvings, old maps, and Shakespeare. The world stays stranger than our stories.
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