We continue a conversation started in the last episode. This time, focusing on the trajectory of Itamar Vieira Junior, a writer who conquered thousands of readers throughout Brazil with his novel Torto Arado (published by However). Born in Salvador (BA), he grew up listening to stories from the countryside, mainly from his father and paternal grandmother, and ended up awakening a taste for writing. But, due to some disagreements, he graduated in Geography. As a public servant of the National Institute of Colonization and Agrarian Reform (INCRA), he visited several communities in the interior of the Northeast and became a doctor in Ethnic and African Studies, focusing on the formation of quilombola communities in the region. Although he never stopped writing, it was from this experience that the reunion with a childhood desire gained strength and today he is, with the book about the sisters Bibiana and Belonísia, the best-selling and awarded writer in the country. We also remember the legacy of Milton Santos, the main scholar of Geography in the history of Brazil and who gives name to the research incentive program that allowed Itamar to develop his academic career, having been the first student to receive the scholarship. From a perspective that we could call the quashing of knowledge, we draw a parallel between three generations dedicated to the cause of the right to land - including Milton Santos, Itamar Vieira Junior and the popular lawyer Américo Barbosa, a member of the Landless Rural Workers Movement.