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About the Author

Rosaleen Love completed her Ph.D. in History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Melbourne; her books include an anthology of Australian science writing, If Atoms Could Talk, and two collections of short fiction, The Total Devotion Machine and Evolution Annie.

Includes the name: Love Rosaleen

Works by Rosaleen Love

Secret Lives of Books (2014) 10 copies, 2 reviews
Holiness 2 copies
Hovering Rock 2 copies

Associated Works

The Time Traveller's Almanac (2013) — Contributor — 666 copies, 16 reviews
Dreaming Down-Under (1998) — Contributor — 194 copies, 2 reviews
Year's Best Fantasy 4 (2004) — Contributor — 122 copies, 1 review
Gathering the Bones (2003) — Contributor — 119 copies, 1 review
Centaurus: The Best of Australian SF (1999) — Contributor — 47 copies
Alien Shores (1994) — Contributor — 38 copies, 2 reviews
The WisCon Chronicles (2007) — Contributor — 32 copies, 1 review
Southern Blood: New Australian Tales of the Supernatural (2003) — Contributor — 29 copies
Mother of Invention (2018) — Contributor — 28 copies, 2 reviews
Daikaiju! Giant Monster Tales (2005) — Contributor — 27 copies
Metaworlds : best Australian science fiction (1994) — Contributor — 25 copies
Forever Shores (2003) — Contributor — 23 copies
Intimate Armagedons (1992) — Contributor — 17 copies
The Women's Press Book of New Myth and Magic (1993) — Contributor — 16 copies
Dreaming in the Dark (2016) — Contributor — 11 copies
The Elastic Book of Numbers (2005) — Contributor — 9 copies

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Reviews

42 reviews
A slender collection of short stories, each one packing quite a punch. Love's writing style is quite pared back, understated, and the subtlety of the stories is a delight. Each story interrogates a different aspect of culture and/or politics, investigating the domestic and small, as well as the world-spanning and world-changing. Well worth a read.
Secret Lives of Books by Rosaleen Love is the latest volume in Twelfth Planet Press's Twelve Planets series of collections. With this one, I wasn't sure what to expect going in — other than feminism — since I'm not familiar with any of Love's other work. And it was about feminism, although that was mainly the last story, which I suspect is the one to stick in people's minds.

It's called Secret Lives of Books, but I think what it's really about is the secret lives of stories. All five show more stories within grapple with the story of stories on some level. "The Secret Lives of Books" is literally about the secret story of a particular collection of books, "Kiddofspeed" is about a story that developed around some photos, "Qasida" is about the mysteries of Mars and the plausibility of fantastical stories, "The slut and the universe" (which has a couple of long subtitles which I'll leave for you to discover yourselves) is about the stories of feminism and misogyny. Fitting least into this patter, "The Kairos Moment" is a story about music, muisic itself being a type of story, albeit not necessarily in the narrative sense. There is, of course, the expected feminism in this collection, but I found it mostly manifested through the existence of female characters, apart from in "The slut and the universe".

My favourite story was "Qasida", which I decided would probably be my favourite when I was still halfway through it and had two more stories left to go. It's sort of a surreal story about Mars and magic (for lack of a better term) travel and aliens, except it's not all that surreal. It's told rather sensibly, which I think is part of the appeal.

I highly recommend this collection to all SFF fans. The stories were all equally good and almost equally unusual. I'd tentatively say this is probably in my top four of the Twelve Planets. Which might not sound like much, but you have to remember there's some very stiff competition.

~

Secret Lives of Books — This was a strange story that didn’t go the way it initially seemed it would. The main character is a recently deceased writer, trying desperately to get a living person’s attention. And then there’s his extensive book collection, which he has always been very attached to. I’d call this soft horror, as we incrementally — creeping — learn more about the books.

Kiddofspeed — Another unusual story, sort of chronicling the adventures of a girl taking photos of Pripyat (near Chernobyl, and based on real events) and sort of talking about the nature of story.

Qasida — Probably my favourite story so far. It’s another story of stories, this time about Mars and strange happenings. Visits to Mars, objects from Mars and the

The Kairos Moment — An odd story about the uplifting feeling people experience when listening to good music. And a researcher trying to study the phenomenon. And some strange happenings. I was entertained and quite amused. (And in case it isn't obvious, this story is certainly represented on the gorgeous cover.)

The slut and the universe — I seem to have noted that all the stories in this collection are unusual and this is no exception. It's a post-apocalyptic fairytale about feminism. Despite the post-apocalyptic setting not much seems to have changed and there is discussion (literally) on such feminist topics as the meaning of the word "slut" an why feminism is the root of all evil. It was also a rather entertaining read.

4.5 / 5 stars

You can read more of my reviews on my blog.
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