Gaspard Kœnig's "Aqua" (L'Observatoire, 2026) is set in Saint-Firmin-sur-Orne and unfolds the story of a Norman village caught between the forces of nature and human planning. The novel opens programmatically with a single falling raindrop, which, as an independent actor, introduces the water system, its cyclicality, and its unpredictability. From this perspective, the plot develops: floods, droughts, and the conflict over the "source des anciens" (the ancients' water resources) put the village community under pressure. The narrative structure is cyclical and elemental: natural events, historical memories, and social interactions intertwine in a movement dominated not by a linear ending, but by continuous adaptation and displacement. Characters such as Martin Jobard, who embodies technocratic modernization, and Maria, guardian of local experience and situational care, structure the events as contrasting poles whose conflict unfolds through polycentric decisions and common-pool resource models. The novel interweaves hydrological, geological, and social layers, transforming landscape, rivers, and springs into political and metaphorical actors. – The essay emphasizes that "Aqua" not only narrates ecology or village politics, but that the narrative structure itself reflects the tension between chaos and order. The chapters are arranged so that natural events rhythmically structure social and political processes: floods, fluctuating water levels, and the memory of past inundations cause central conflicts to escalate gradually, simultaneously transforming power relations and possibilities for action. The narrative style – from the prosopopoeic depiction of the falling drop to cyclical river and landscape imagery – reveals how human control always remains provisional. Character actions, place descriptions, and hydrological details intertwine to form a relational framework in which water functions as the lifeblood of the community. The essay argues that Kœnig uses the anti-teleological structure of the novel to illustrate the interminability of ecological and social conflicts in literary terms: politics, technology and nature do not appear as sovereign entities, but as interlocking dynamics that can only be negotiated situationally.
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