Silviano C. Barbosa's novel "The Sixth Night"

A Goan novel “THE SIXTH NIGHT” written by Goan author (based in Canada), 
Silviano C. Barbosa, was released at Clube Vasco da Gama, Panjim, Goa on 21st 
December 2004 by Margaret Mascarenhas.
 
The novel portrays the travails of a Catholic girl growing up in traditional 
Goa of the 1950s during the last decade of the Portuguese rule.  Linda Cardoso 
derives immense pleasure from the simple village life steeped in customs, 
traditions, feasts and celebrations. Until…she comes face to face with ugly 
caste discrimination inflicted on her people for centuries. An old Goan custom 
declares that the goddess who visits the child on the sixth night after birth 
determines the destiny of the child forever. Was it her destiny to be 
beautiful, lively and excel at everything and yet be unhappy?

May be the goddess had not felt welcome enough… She falls hopelessly in love 
with a foreigner, only to lose him abruptly during the Indo-Portuguese conflict 
of 1961.   Left alone, ostracized, helpless and pregnant with a half-Portuguese 
love-child, she struggles with thoughts of despair, single motherhood and the 
pain of separation as life drags her through three continents ultimately 
landing her in a new country – Canada.  A story of love, hate, jealousy and 
intrigue – great insights into Goan life, traditions and customs. Will bad 
karma haunt her all her life? Or will her steely determination and innate 
goodness change what was written on The Sixth Night?  

The book starts with a detailed nostalgic background of the Goan village life, 
slowly taking the reader to a fast life of a Liceista at Liceu Nacional Afonso 
de Albuquerque in the Cidade de Goa, Pangim, where the novel reaches its climax 
and the protagonist feels the after-effects of Indian invasion/Goan liberation, 
and from there the last part of the book takes the reader through complexities 
in life through the U.K. Portugal and Germany and finally to Canada. 

The preview readers have already hinted at the possibility of a Bollywood movie 
based on the story. With heavy doses of nostalgia, humour, usage of Konkani and 
Portuguese words to give the novel an authentic touch of a life in pre-
liberation Goa, the novel is a feel-good kind of a story, which rewards the 
reader for going through over 300 pages of interesting intellectual, social, 
and political stimulation, deductive reasoning, logical conclusions, and 
historical exclusions.  

Silviano Barbosa, who now lives in Toronto, Canada, after leaving Goa 33 years 
ago, still finds time to be in touch with his mother-tongue Konkani and Goan 
culture.  He has already produced a sold-out Konkani album “Classic Goa - Hits 
of the Millennium” which has sold over 4000 cassettes and CDs when he visited 
Goa in 1999. He wrote the lyrics of all the songs on this album, some of which 
you can still hear on Goa’s FM Radio. 

This novel is his second contribution to Goa’s growing cultural heritage, with 
his unconditional love for Goa.  


For details on how to obtain your copy of the Novel, contact: Goa Raj Books,   
14 Lakeview Colony,  Miramar, Panjim, Goa, India  Tel: 2463242 Email: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 



Goa-World.Com Team (Kuwait) congratulates Silviano C. Barbosa

Reply via email to