Dubai: Hafsa Lodi reflects on faith and womanhood in debut novel ‘Turbulence’

Dubai-based author Hafsa Lodi has emerged as a significant literary voice with her debut novel ‘Turbulence,’ which premiered at the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature. The 34-year-old writer, whose life has spanned three continents, channels her multicultural experiences into a profound exploration of modern Muslim femininity.

Lodi’s journey began in the United States before relocating to Dubai at age 14, with subsequent educational pursuits in Toronto where she earned a journalism degree from Ryerson University and London where she completed a master’s in Islamic Law. These diverse cultural immersions fundamentally shaped the nuanced perspectives that characterize her literary work.

The novel’s conception originated from a compelling 2020 news account about a Nigerian woman delivering mid-flight from Dubai to Lagos. This narrative gained personal resonance when Lodi herself became pregnant and contemplated international travel for childbirth. The psychological tension surrounding potential in-flight labor became the emotional catalyst for her protagonist Dunya’s story.

‘Turbulence’ challenges conventional Middle Eastern societal expectations by examining marriage and motherhood as deliberate choices rather than predetermined destinies. Through Dunya’s character, Lodi investigates the complex emotional labor women undertake—often invisibly—balancing familial roles with personal identity. The work normalizes the coexistence of profound maternal love with personal doubt, presenting this tension as an authentic aspect of womanhood.

While set within privileged environments, the novel courageously addresses universal female experiences: the negotiation between attractiveness and modesty, the balance of warmth and authority in parenting, and practicing a faith that honors tradition while embracing contemporary wisdom. Lodi deliberately avoids simplistic portrayals of Islam, instead presenting it as a spectrum of complexity through diverse character perspectives.

The author, previously known for her non-fiction work ‘Modesty: A Fashion Paradox,’ transitioned to fiction for its creative freedom. Though not autobiographical, ‘Turbulence’ incorporates authentic elements of Gulf expatriate life, particularly in its latter sections set in an unnamed cosmopolitan hub.

Early critical reception has been predominantly favorable. Islamic scholar Dr. Sofia Rehman praised the novel as ‘quietly provoking, intimate, brave and deeply humane,’ while Iranian-American novelist Marjan Kamali described it as ‘heartfelt.’ Some literary agents criticized its introspective nature, a quality Lodi intentionally cultivated.

Inspired by this creative journey, Lodi is currently developing three additional novels, each approximately one-third complete. Balancing literary ambition with raising two young children, the author anticipates these works will emerge when the timing proves optimal for their artistic launch.