Imagine a book so complex and mind-bending that it challenges the very concept of reading itself. In 1960, French author Raymond Queneau introduced a book that is likely the most unreadable in the world—despite being only 10 pages long.
Title of the 10 page Book
The book consists of just ten pages and is titled Cent Mille Milliards de Poèmes (One Hundred Thousand Billion Poems). Each verse follows the same rhyme scheme and is printed on paper strips, forcing readers to rearrange different lines from various poems.
As a result, the book creates one hundred trillion unique poems, meaning no one can ever fully read it, no matter how much effort is put in. Completing all the verses would take millions of years—and all of this fits within just ten pages.