PCLogin()

Already happened story

MLogin()

Already happened story > Loomlines: The House of Threads

Loomlines: The House of Threads

Author:Wildfox

Category:Drama

Status:

Action: Latest Chapter Add to bookshelf Go straight to the bottom

Latest Chapter:2026/3/16 3:04:11

In the coastal town of Kannur, where monsoon winds rattle ancestral roofs and sacred Theyyam flames burn against the dark, the Raman family has woven cloth for generations. Their loom has outlived storms, political uprisings, and shifting governments. It has survived hunger. It has survived pride. But it may not survive change. As the 1990s usher in liberalization, Gulf migration, and the slow collapse of the handloom economy, the threads that once held the Raman household together begin to strain. Raman, a traditional weaver bound to land and ritual, believes inheritance is duty. Fathima, a schoolteacher who understands silence too well, knows survival requires flexibility. Sameer, restless and ambitious, leaves for the Gulf — trading sea breeze for desert heat and family for remittance. Devika, brilliant and defiant, dreams of a life beyond inherited expectation. Money begins to flow. Authority begins to shift. Faith begins to fracture. Political tensions simmer in Kannur’s streets. Ritual becomes spectacle. Migration becomes identity. The ancestral house, once unshakable, becomes contested ground. Across two decades of monsoon seasons, departures, funerals, betrayals, and reluctant reconciliations, The House of Threads traces how a family’s private fractures mirror a region in transformation. Because inheritance is not land. It is memory. It is silence. It is the tension that holds — until it doesn’t. In this sweeping first installment of the Loomlines saga, an intimate, unflinching portrait of a coastal family standing at the edge of modern India — where every choice pulls a thread, and every thread reshapes the pattern is crafted.


introduction: In the coastal town of Kannur, where monsoon winds rattle ancestral roofs and sacred Theyyam flames burn against the dark, the Raman family has woven cloth for generations. Their loom has outlived storms, political uprisings, and shifting governments. It has survived hunger. It has survived pride. But it may not survive change. As the 1990s usher in liberalization, Gulf migration, and the slow collapse of the handloom economy, the threads that once held the Raman household together begin to strain. Raman, a traditional weaver bound to land and ritual, believes inheritance is duty. Fathima, a schoolteacher who understands silence too well, knows survival requires flexibility. Sameer, restless and ambitious, leaves for the Gulf — trading sea breeze for desert heat and family for remittance. Devika, brilliant and defiant, dreams of a life beyond inherited expectation. Money begins to flow. Authority begins to shift. Faith begins to fracture. Political tensions simmer in Kannur’s streets. Ritual becomes spectacle. Migration becomes identity. The ancestral house, once unshakable, becomes contested ground. Across two decades of monsoon seasons, departures, funerals, betrayals, and reluctant reconciliations, The House of Threads traces how a family’s private fractures mirror a region in transformation. Because inheritance is not land. It is memory. It is silence. It is the tension that holds — until it doesn’t. In this sweeping first installment of the Loomlines saga, an intimate, unflinching portrait of a coastal family standing at the edge of modern India — where every choice pulls a thread, and every thread reshapes the pattern is crafted.