João Aguiar (writer)
João Casimiro Namorado de Aguiar (28 October 1943 – 3 June 2010) was a Portuguese writer and journalist.[1] He spent his youth in Portuguese Mozambique.

Aguiar was born and died in Lisbon. After working for a time in the Portuguese tourist industry in Brussels and Amsterdam, he studied journalism at the Free University of Brussels and in 1976 returned to Portugal to work as a journalist.
He worked for RTP (where he began his career in 1963) and a variety of daily and weekly periodicals such as the Daily News, A Luta, Diário Popular, O País, and Sábado. In 1981 he was named press secretary of the Ministry of Quality of Life, a short-lived government department concerned with sports and the environment. He was a regular contributor to the monthly magazine Superinteressante and sat on its editorial board. He died of cancer on 3 June 2010 in Lisbon.
He dedicated himself to literature, being one of the most acclaimed Portuguese novelists in the genre of the historical novel.
Major works
- An Investigation of Portuguese Esotericism (Uma incursão no esoterismo português) (1983)
 - The Voice of the Gods (A Voz dos Deuses) (1984)
 - The Man With No Name (O homem sem nome) (1986)
 - The Throne of the Most High (O trono do altíssimo) (1988)
 - The Song of the Phantasms (O canto dos fantasmas) (1990)
 - The Pearl-Eaters (Os comedores de pérolas) (1992)
 - The Hour of Sertorius (A hora de Sertório) (1994)
 - The Eulogy of the Spirits (A encomendação das almas) (1995)
 - Solitary Navigator (Navegador solitário) (1996)
 - Inês of Portugal (Inês de Portugal) (1997)
 - The Dragon of Smoke (O dragão de fumo) (1998)
 - The Green Cathedral (A catedral verde) (2000)
 - A Goddess in the Fog (Uma Deusa na Bruma) (2003)
 - The Seventh Hero (O sétimo herói) (2004)
 - The Garden of Delights (O jardim das delícias) (2005)
 - The Sitting Tiger (O tigre sentado) (2005, 2nd edition)
 - Lapedo – A Child in the Valley (Lapedo – uma criança no vale) (2006)
 - The Priory of the Cifrão (O priorado do cifrão) (2008)
 
Children's fiction
- The Group of Four (O Bando dos Quatro)
 - Sebastian and the Secret Worlds (Sebastião e os Mundos Secretos)
 
Other works
- The White Orchid (A Orquídea Branca), libretto for an opera with music by Jorge Salgueiro (premiered 27 October 2008)
 - I Saw the Third Reich Fall (Eu vi morrer o III Reich) by Manuel Homem de Mello (edited and with commentary by João Aguiar) (Ediciones Vega, Lisboa)
 
References
- ^ Lusa (June 3, 2010). "Morreu o escritor João Aguiar". Publico.pt. Archived from the original on June 6, 2010. Retrieved June 3, 2010.
 
External links
- (in Portuguese) Website with biography and photos
 - (in Portuguese) Information about the author