Autistic love may go unnoticed by neurotypical spectators due to the double empathy problem (Milton, 2012) and a neurotypical gaze (McDermott, 2022). Together, these reproduce limiting recognitions of love to a narrow set of behaviors, such as certain acts of love. To oppose the exclusion resulting from such conventions, we use a collective autoethnographic literary approach to explore (1) scientific and fictional depictions of autistic love, (2) neurodivergent readers' (including our own) experiences of those depictions, and (3) how our own experiences may neuroqueer traditional ideas of love. By this we illustrate a broader range of pleasure and connection. Thus, the chapter invites the reader into an intimate experience of rereading love to recenter autistic perspectives, connect within and across neurotypes, and celebrate diverse forms of autistic acts of love.