Rowe's short story collection
Tarcutta Wake was published by the
University of Queensland Press in 2012. The collection was longlisted for the 2013
Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award. In a review in
Australian Book Review, William Heyward wrote that the collective was somewhat formulaic and monochromatic, but that its stories were mysterious and satisfying. Reviewing the collection for
Overland,
Tony Birch wrote that Rowe's writing deserved to be read more widely and that she was a talented writer of "
micro-fiction". Her story, "Real Life" was published in
Granta. In 2016 Rowe's first novel
A Loving, Faithful Animal was published by the
University of Queensland Press. The book was longlisted for the
Miles Franklin Award and was shortlisted for the
Voss Literary Prize and the fiction prize at the
Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature. In a review in
The New York Times,
Samantha Hunt wrote that the novel featured "gorgeous, precise language" and a compelling cast of characters. In
The Sydney Morning Herald, Emma Young praised the novel for its "measured and concise writing" and its exploration of grief and trauma. Reviews in the
Financial Times and
Australian Book Review similarly praised the precision of Rowe's writing style. Rowe's next short story collection
Here Until August was published by
Black Inc in 2019. The collection was shortlisted for the 2020
Stella Prize and was shortlisted for the short story collection prize at the 2020
Queensland Literary Awards. In a review in
The New York Times, Siobhan Jones praised the collection for its diverse collection of settings. Reviewing the work in
The Saturday Paper, Roanna Gonsalves described it as "a superb collection, pared back, astute, yet brimming with life and love and expectation". In 2025, Rowe's novel
Little World was published by Black Inc. The novel received somewhat mixed reviews. In
The Guardian, Beejay Silcox wrote that Rowe's writing was characteristically gorgeous, but that the novel felt hollow and lacked answers to the questions it posed. Tony Hughes-d'Aeth gave a more positive review of the novel in
The Conversation, writing that it had an exquisite lyricism. In
Australian Book Review,
Maria Takolander described the novel as "grandly and enduringly enigmatic" and described it as a work of
magical realism.
Little World was shortlisted for the University of Queensland Fiction Book Award at the 2025
Queensland Literary Awards. It was longlisted for the
Republic of Consciousness Prize US and Canada. ==Works==