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Vividwater

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Shortlisted for the NZ Booklovers Awards 2026 for best adult fiction

In a future world, only a few hydrospheres, like AotearoaNZ, have enough drinkable water, nearly all sold overseas. Alex is a mnemopath, a professional memory machine, at the main water trading bureau, WaiOra. Her job isn’t noble, selling water overseas while locals die of thirst. But she needed a job, and the extra water allowance.

Her humdrum life, struggling to earn enough water to live, is upended when her great love comes back to AotearoaNZ, after fifteen years in China. Alex’s world is transformed to one of excitement, danger and a relationship she has to hide
Vividwater paints a disturbing view of the future where decades of drought have changed the face of AotearoaNZ, and the people who live there. But even in a society dominated by ruthlessness and thirst, there is still hope and glimmers of innocence. The echoes of the past that can redeem us live on in the most unlikely places.

268 pages, Paperback

Published April 5, 2025

3 people are currently reading
3715 people want to read

About the author

Jacqueline Owens

2 books14 followers
Jacqueline Owens lives in Wellington. Vividwater was longlisted for Grindstone Literary International Novel Prize, and shortlisted twice in the Laura Solomon Cuba Press Prize. It is the first in a three-part series.

Excerpts and short stories from other manuscripts have been published in online journals. A screenplay, The Floating World, won the New Zealand Writers Guild (NZWG) Best Unproduced Screenplay Competition and another, Three Gardens, was a quarterfinalist in the Nicholl and Blue Cat competitions. A young adult novel, Bluest Moon, was published by New Women’s Press, in the 90s

Outside writing, she has had mnemopath-like jobs in government and made the most of degrees in Classics and Political Science, as a grand-finalist on Mastermind New Zealand, with subjects The Chronicles of Narnia and Classical Greek Mythology. While doing a Master of Fine Arts in Writing for Screen and Television, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, she was a university teaching assistant and assessed screenplays for production companies.


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12 (25%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews
Profile Image for Tajammul Kothari.
Author 3 books48 followers
July 7, 2025
Vividwater is both a gripping yet disturbing tale of power struggle with the "elixir of life" as a background.

The main protagonist Alex is torn between the haves and the have-nots and the dilemma of choosing the right from the wrong.

Set in a future world, the story can so much relate to the trying times we are staying in currently where the underclass are deprived by the governments and corporations for their own benefits and profits.

The setting of the novel is what I particularly liked and it seems the author is definitely in love with the city as she describes the environment with utmost details.

Coming at around 134 pages, the story is fast paced with a good resolution at the end.

Recommended read!
1 review1 follower
September 12, 2025
I don’t usually read dystopian fiction but Vividwater was riveting. The future world portrayed by the author felt disturbingly real: one or two climactic shifts and we’re all enslaved, parched, and desperate, unless of course you’re rich and politically well-connected.

I cannot wait to read more of the “perspicacious” Miss Alex Pym.
Profile Image for Miranda.
50 reviews
January 20, 2026
I really enjoyed this book. It is set in Wellington so you’ll recognize everything which is fun. But it’s also scary because it is so believable- a New Zealand where all the water is privately owned and in short supply. I liked the characters and now I want to know what they do next and how the hell we get ourselves out of this mess. Absolutely recommended.
Profile Image for Jennifer Lane.
Author 2 books16 followers
Read
July 30, 2025
Alex works as a ‘mnemopath’ (professional memory machine) for a water trading bureau with questionable ethics. She’s struggling to get by on her meagre water rations when the man she loves returns from China after many years, and her life takes an even more dangerous turn. A fast-paced, humorous, and tightly-written dystopian novel set in Wellington, Vividwater left me thirsty for more. Hopefully a sequel is on the cards!
Profile Image for Kate.
23 reviews1 follower
May 13, 2025
If you liked the futuristic dystopian realism of She’s a Killer by Kirsten McDougall or Prophet Song by Paul Lynch you will love this book.

Wellingtonians (and public servants in particular) would love this book - a great premise which is terrifying and entirely plausible. Lots of social and political satire to enjoy.

Fantastic to hear it is a trilogy and I can definitely see the screen play from this … and the fun casting Jarred and Ross and of course Alex.
1 review
July 6, 2025
A brilliantly depicted picture of a disturbingly possible future. Sci-fi meets potential real life sometime in the near future. Highly recommended and topical.
Profile Image for Anne Matheson.
153 reviews1 follower
April 11, 2025
An enjoyable if slightly disturbing read. I loved reading a book set in Wellington with a very likeable heroine. It's Wellington in the fictional dystopian future, but it's a very convincing future. Depriving the natives of a plentiful resource while selling it overseas is scarily likely (and to some extent happening already) and the massive gap in quality of life between the haves and have nots seems like where we're already heading.

Vividwater gives a voice to people who are smarter than their bosses but don't get the credit for it, who get out-manoeuvred by office politics and to those who have had a meaningful relationship scuppered by geographic separation and differing employment opportunities.

Vividwater water is funny and empathetic as well as disturbing, and you should read it.
Profile Image for backy.
16 reviews1 follower
September 26, 2025
“People do all sorts for things for water. They sell their bodies, if they can, or their children if they can’t. They sneak into houses, they hold up old people.” In her sci-fi novel Vividwater, Jacqueline Owens immerses readers in a near-future world of extreme water scarcity. In this sometimes alien, often all-too-familiar world set mostly in Wellington, New Zealand, many people carry voice-activated, unhackable water flasks. Their status, perhaps their very lives, depends on what level of water access card they have—if they have a card at all.

Owens paints this world in exquisite detail, such that when the protagonist, Alexa Pym, describes her thirst, my own throat felt parched. The narrative is present tense, from Alexa’s viewpoint. And that narrative and the dialogue sparkle with depth, wit, and dry (of course) humor. Alexa and the other main characters are realistic and relatable; you probably know people like some of Alexa’s mates and coworkers. The book is brimming with kiwi phrases and slang, and also Māori characters, language, and culture, all of which add to the richness and realism of the story. The writing is of high quality, with only a few small errors. My only nits were that sometimes the dialogue, often heavy with colloquialisms, was hard to follow, and something happens at the very end that doesn’t seem realistic given the rest of the book.

I loved this book and recommend it without reservation. But be aware, the stakes aren’t of the “existential threat to Earth” variety. They’re much more personal—but still compelling, and very realistic and relatable. Even the ending is realistic. There’s a love story, but it’s low-key. There’s also a mystery. But mostly this is a story about flawed people and how they cope with difficult circumstances.

NOTE: This book is for Mature (18+) readers due to language.
Profile Image for Readerswith Heart.
112 reviews17 followers
January 29, 2026
Vividwater is one of those quiet, unsettling stories that stays with you long after you turn the last page. Set in a future where water has become the ultimate currency, Jacqueline Owens imagines an AotearoaNZ scarred by decades of drought where survival is measured not in money, but in rationed drops of drinkable water.
At the heart of the novel is Alex, a mnemopath whose job is to extract and process memories at WaiOra, the main water trading bureau. There’s something deeply uncomfortable about her work: selling water overseas while people at home suffer. Yet Owens resists turning Alex into a hero or a villain. She’s painfully human doing what she must to survive, clinging to the extra water allowance that keeps her alive. That moral tension gives the story its emotional weight.
The return of Alex’s long-lost love after fifteen years in China shifts the narrative from quiet desperation into something far more dangerous and intimate. Their relationship, forced into secrecy, adds urgency and vulnerability to a world already on edge. The romance doesn’t feel like an escape from the dystopia; instead, it deepens it, reminding us what’s at stake when even love becomes risky.
What makes Vividwater especially powerful is its restraint. The future Owens depicts isn’t loud or flashy it’s bleak in a slow, believable way. The scarcity, the bureaucracy, and the everyday cruelty feel uncomfortably plausible. Yet despite the harshness, the novel never loses its sense of hope. Small moments of innocence, memory, and connection flicker throughout the story, suggesting that even in a society shaped by thirst and ruthlessness, humanity endures.
Thoughtful, atmospheric, and emotionally grounded, Vividwater is a haunting exploration of survival, memory, and love in a world where the most basic resource has become a weapon. It’s a dystopian novel that feels less like a warning from the future and more like an echo of choices we’re already making.
3 reviews
January 29, 2026
At first, I expected a typical dystopian story about climate collapse and water scarcity, but this book goes much deeper than that. The idea of water being traded like a commodity while people die of thirst is disturbing on its own but what really makes the story powerful is Alex. She isn’t a hero in the traditional sense. She’s just trying to survive, making morally uncomfortable choices because she has to, and that makes her feel painfully real.
Alex’s role as a mnemopath essentially a living memory machine adds an unexpected emotional layer to the story. Memory, loss, love, and guilt are woven into the narrative in a way that feels intimate rather than flashy. When her former love returns after fifteen years, the story shifts from quiet desperation to tension and danger, and the emotional stakes rise fast.
What stayed with me most is the atmosphere. The world of Vividwater feels dry, harsh, and suffocating, yet there are moments of tenderness and hope that prevent it from becoming bleak for the sake of it. Jacqueline Owens does a great job showing how people adapt to injustice not because they agree with it, but because survival leaves little room for idealism.
This is a thoughtful, unsettling dystopian novel that asks hard questions about resources, memory, and what we’re willing to trade to stay alive. It’s not loud, but it’s haunting and long after finishing, I found myself thinking about how close this future feels.
Highly recommended for readers who enjoy reflective, character-driven dystopian fiction.
Profile Image for Swapna Peri ( Book Reviews Cafe ).
2,329 reviews84 followers
May 3, 2026
"Vividwater" by Jacqueline Owens is a fast-paced dystopian novel that feels both gripping and unsettling at the same time. Set in a future where water has become the most valuable resource, the story follows Alex, a young woman caught between powerful systems and struggling communities. The idea of water being controlled by governments and corporations makes the world feel uncomfortably close to reality, which adds to the tension. Even though the book is short, it builds a strong atmosphere and keeps the story moving quickly.

One of the highlights of the novel is its setting. The detailed portrayal of Wellington brings the story to life, making the futuristic world feel believable rather than distant. Alex is a relatable and likeable protagonist, especially as she navigates her difficult job and personal life. Her role as a “mnemopath” is a unique touch, and her emotional struggles—balancing survival, love, and morality—add depth to the story. There’s also a subtle mix of humour and satire that lightens the tone without taking away from the seriousness of the themes.

At its core, "Vividwater" is about inequality, power, and the cost of survival. The divide between the rich and the poor is sharply drawn, and the story raises important questions about how far society could go if resources are controlled by a few. While some moments are disturbing, they feel purposeful and thought-provoking. Overall, it’s an engaging and relevant read that leaves you thinking long after it ends, and it definitely feels like the beginning of something bigger.
Profile Image for Mitchell Waldman.
Author 20 books30 followers
December 10, 2025
Vividwater is both a compelling speculative fiction novel and a warning of how things soon may be in the not so distant future where water is the new currency of life, where people without jobs do not have cards for access to good quality water, and where people roams the streets begging, robbing, or scouring for water. It's not a pretty world, but with climate change a very real possibility. That said the author writes a page-turner of a story, the protagonist, Alex, working as a mnemonist or memory specialist for a government water trade agency in Aotearoa, New Zealand which is one of the major controllers of water resources in the region. Her true love, Lawrence, who works for a Chinese water trade agency, Zenshui, comes back to Aoteroa as the chief hydrologist foe Zenshui and the flame between Alex, after many years apart, is rekindled. But will it last? And who are the good guys in this water is business world where the rich have water and the poor don't and people like Alex and Lawrence have to work for those controlling water resources just to have access to water to survive themselves? This is an entertaining novel that will keep you reading and wondering about the future of our children.
Profile Image for Nalongo Achen.
56 reviews2 followers
February 14, 2026
Vividwater is one of those dystopian novels that lingers long after you’ve finished the last page. Jacqueline Owens builds a chillingly believable future where water is currency, morality is compromised, and survival often outweighs compassion. The concept of Alex being a “mnemopath” essentially a professional memory machine is both fascinating and symbolic. In a world stripped of resources, even memories feel like commodities.

What struck me most was the emotional core of the story. Beneath the droughts, political systems, and water trade lies a deeply personal narrative about love, sacrifice, and the cost of survival. Alex isn’t a perfect heroine she’s conflicted, pragmatic, and at times morally uncomfortable which makes her feel real. Her reunion with her long-lost love adds intensity and vulnerability to an already tense world.

Owens doesn’t just write about environmental collapse; she writes about what it does to people. The atmosphere feels heavy, urgent, and disturbingly plausible. Yet, even in its bleakest moments, the novel holds onto a thread of hope. It’s a powerful, unsettling read that feels closer to reality than we’d like to admit.
Profile Image for Anna Hola.
9 reviews
February 14, 2026
Vividwater is a quietly unsettling dystopian novel that feels disturbingly plausible. Jacqueline Owens doesn’t rely on dramatic explosions or over the top chaos instead, she builds a slow, creeping sense of dread. The idea that AotearoaNZ has become one of the last places with drinkable water, yet sells most of it overseas while its own citizens struggle, is both heartbreaking and infuriating.

Alex is a compelling protagonist because she’s not heroic in the traditional sense. She’s tired, practical, and doing what she must to survive. Her role as a mnemopath adds an eerie layer to the story in a society where water is rationed, even memories are controlled and commodified. When her former love returns after fifteen years, the story shifts from survival drama to something more intimate and dangerous. Their relationship adds urgency and vulnerability to an already fragile world.
What makes this novel stand out is its realism. The drought, the bureaucracy, the moral compromises it all feels like a natural extension of our current climate anxieties. It’s a thoughtful, well crafted story that leaves you reflecting long after you close the book.
5 reviews
February 14, 2026
Vividwater is a haunting and intelligent dystopian novel that feels uncomfortably close to reality. Jacqueline Owens imagines a future where water is the ultimate commodity, and AotearoaNZ survives not through abundance, but through control and trade. The premise alone is compelling, but it’s the human story at the center that truly makes this book memorable.

Alex is a beautifully flawed protagonist. As a mnemopath working for the main water trading bureau, she’s complicit in a system that profits while others suffer yet she’s also just trying to survive in a world where even water is rationed. That moral tension gives the story weight. When her great love returns after fifteen years away, the emotional stakes rise sharply. Their hidden relationship adds layers of vulnerability and danger to an already fragile existence.

Owens writes with restraint and depth, allowing the bleakness of the setting to speak for itself. The drought scarred landscape feels stark and believable, but there are still moments of tenderness and hope woven throughout. Vividwater is not just a warning about climate change it’s a story about memory, love, and the quiet resilience of the human spirit.
Profile Image for Scotliteboost.
212 reviews17 followers
February 14, 2026
I didn’t expect Vividwater to hit me as hard as it did. At first, I was drawn in by the premise a future where drinkable water is scarce and controlled by a trading bureau but I stayed for Alex. She’s caught in a system that profits from suffering, working a job she doesn’t believe in just to survive. That moral tension runs through every chapter.
The drought-ravaged version of AotearoaNZ feels vivid and haunting. You can almost feel the dryness in the air, the desperation of people measuring life in water rations. But what truly gives the story depth is the return of Alex’s former love. Their relationship is layered with history, secrecy, and risk, adding emotional stakes to an already fragile world.
The book balances political dystopia with intimate human moments beautifully. It’s not just about climate catastrophe; it’s about memory, identity, and whether love can still exist in a world ruled by scarcity. Thought-provoking, tense, and quietly hopeful, Vividwater is a compelling read for anyone who enjoys character-driven dystopian fiction.
17 reviews
February 14, 2026
This book surprised me with how emotional it became. I went in expecting a climate dystopia, but Vividwater is really about people their choices, their regrets, and the memories that shape them. Jacqueline Owens creates a future that is harsh and stripped down to the essentials, where water determines who lives comfortably and who barely survives.

Alex’s internal conflict is one of the strongest elements of the story. She works for WaiOra, helping sell water abroad while knowing her own people are thirsty. That guilt hums beneath the surface of everything she does. When her long lost love re enters her life, it forces her to confront not only her feelings but the compromises she’s made.

The writing has a steady, immersive quality that makes the world feel tangible. There’s tension, yes, but also tenderness. Even in a society ruled by scarcity, Owens shows that love and hope still find ways to survive. It’s a poignant and thought provoking read that blends environmental warning with deeply human storytelling.
2 reviews2 followers
April 29, 2025
Within the first few lines, Owens paints a future that is well within the realms of possibility. A future where clean drinking water is scarce and sold off to the highest bidder.

Vividwater depicts a very different Wellington to the one I know, one filled with scavvos, desperate with thirst. A city where mnemopath Alex has to play the game at her government department, in order to get the water she needs. Alex's job is making her superiors look good, with facts and figures and secrets at her capable fingertips. She is as stable and secure as one can be in this dystopian world... until an old love comes back into her life, and she finds herself immersed in deals and politics way over her head.

This is a clever, gripping read. Highly recommend, and I look forward to more works from this author.
Profile Image for Evelyn Praise.
2 reviews
March 4, 2026
This book is a striking exploration of scarcity, power, and human resilience. The concept of hydrospheres controlling the world’s drinkable water is chillingly believable, and the author handles it with intelligence and nuance. Alex’s internal conflict, selling water overseas while locals suffer, makes the story morally complex and deeply engaging. The return of her great love adds emotional intensity and raises the stakes beautifully. Vividwater is both a cautionary tale and a story of hope, reminding readers that even in harsh systems, humanity still finds ways to endure.
Profile Image for Ebenezer A.
2 reviews
March 4, 2026
Vividwater delivers a compelling mix of dystopian suspense and intimate human drama. The idea of earning water to survive is terrifyingly effective, and the structure of society around this resource feels carefully constructed. Alex’s profession as a memory machine is one of the most original elements of the book, adding depth and intrigue to the plot. The love story woven into this harsh world adds warmth and vulnerability. It is a gripping read that highlights both the fragility and strength of humanity.
379 reviews6 followers
April 19, 2026
Nominated for a NZ Booklovers Award, VW is a dystopian thriller with a plot that revolves around selling and rationing water. Subterfuge, corporate corruption and double-dealing include the subversion of Te Reo and Māori into 'waterservations' and a delicate romance. Owen's characters are fun, and funny - disguising what they're really up to. However, they've underestimated Alex, who not only has a photographic memory, she worked in a watercrimes unit. Well written with humour, emotion and some terrific water-related similes.
Profile Image for Peter Smith.
3 reviews1 follower
December 11, 2025
A curiously evolving net of hydro-conspiracy in a not too distant foreseeable but disturbing future where we very much don't want to get to. I really enjoyed the future global hydro-politics and social challenges explored, seen from the perspective of a smart but lowly worker in a small pacific nation trying to hold onto some sense of cultural identity but play in big global arena. I sense there's more of this to come... ideally just in fiction and not in reality if we don't tread carefully.
Profile Image for Favour James.
2 reviews
March 4, 2026
Jacqueline Owens has crafted a dystopian future that feels vivid and immersive. The drought ravaged AotearoaNZ setting is richly detailed, and the tension around water trading gives the story constant urgency. What stood out most was the emotional core, Alex’s struggle with her job, her survival, and the rekindled love she must keep hidden. The balance between political commentary and personal story is handled exceptionally well. Vividwater is unsettling, emotional, and beautifully written.
Profile Image for Evelyn Praise.
2 reviews
March 4, 2026
This novel is a powerful reflection on climate crisis and inequality wrapped in an emotionally charged narrative. The depiction of AotearoaNZ transformed by decades of drought is stark and thought provoking. Alex is a layered character whose moral struggles make the story feel real and urgent. The themes of redemption, memory, and hope shine through even in the bleakest moments. Vividwater is an unforgettable story that blends social commentary with heartfelt storytelling.
Profile Image for C.I. DeMann.
Author 3 books15 followers
March 9, 2026
This is a very well-done near future dystopian story. The world is extremely well-designed and real, the characters were sympathetic, and the premise was all too believable. At times, this book bummed me out because it seemed a little too realistic, a little too believable, a little too close to home, so if you're looking for an escape from reality, I'm not sure I'd recommend it. But if you're looking for a very well written thriller, yeah, I really think you'd like this.
94 reviews1 follower
July 3, 2025
Being a Wellingtonian added to the enjoyment of this read. Not a totally unrealistic novel about how the future pans as resources we take for granted become more scarce. Of course the 'haves' in society ensure they stay on top. Much of the depiction of working in the public sector could be taken from today. I think this is a first novel and I will be following for more.
Profile Image for Book  Lover.
101 reviews15 followers
December 16, 2025
Vividwater is a gripping and emotionally charged dystopian novel that feels disturbingly plausible. The world building is sharp and immersive, painting a future where water is currency and survival comes at a moral cost. Alex is a compelling protagonist flawed, human, and deeply relatable and her personal struggle adds real heart to the larger societal crisis. The blend of speculative science, ethical tension, and quiet hope makes this a thought provoking read that lingers long after the final page. Highly recommended for fans of intelligent, character driven dystopian fiction.
17.1k reviews174 followers
September 4, 2025
A future without water is not going to be easy. She sell water to overseas companies while trying to earn more water for herself. An old love will reappear and her life will be upended so see how she gets on
I received an advance copy from hidden gems and. Powerful read
Profile Image for William Barkley.
4 reviews
September 28, 2025
Absolutely gripped from the first chapter. Vividwater blends near-future worldbuilding with a heartbreakingly believable heroine in Alex. The water-scarcity setting felt urgent and original, I couldn’t put it down
Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews