Ink disappearing after two weeks of exposure

Buenos Aires-based bookshop and publisher Eterna Cadencia has released El Libro que No Puede Esperar – which translates as ‘The Book that Cannot Wait’ – an anthology of new fiction from Latin American authors printed in ink that disappears after two months of opening the book.
Silk-screened using a special pink ink, the book comes sealed in air-tight packaging that, once opened, allows the printed material to react with the atmosphere. The result is that after two months, the text vanishes. The more the text is exposed to light the faster it disappears, so unread pages may retain the text as long as the reader doesn’t skip ahead in the book. The ink is made from a “secret” formula that is highly reactive with sunlight and air.
With much discussion currently centering on portable electronic readers and e-books, deemed to be bringing about the death of the physical novel, the creators aimed to add a bit of magic to the anthology, as well as encourage buyers to actually read it once they’ve received it instead of leaving it in their ‘to do’ pile. As the authors inside are all previously unpublished, the concept, developed with help from ad agency Draftfcb, acts as a way to ensure that readers engage with as much of the material as possible while they have the chance. The sense of urgency was important for the publishers to encourage readers to give new authors a chance and force them to digest the content quickly.

Ink disappearing after two weeks of exposure

Buenos Aires-based bookshop and publisher Eterna Cadencia has released El Libro que No Puede Esperar – which translates as ‘The Book that Cannot Wait’ – an anthology of new fiction from Latin American authors printed in ink that disappears after two months of opening the book.

Silk-screened using a special pink ink, the book comes sealed in air-tight packaging that, once opened, allows the printed material to react with the atmosphere. The result is that after two months, the text vanishes. The more the text is exposed to light the faster it disappears, so unread pages may retain the text as long as the reader doesn’t skip ahead in the book. The ink is made from a “secret” formula that is highly reactive with sunlight and air.

With much discussion currently centering on portable electronic readers and e-books, deemed to be bringing about the death of the physical novel, the creators aimed to add a bit of magic to the anthology, as well as encourage buyers to actually read it once they’ve received it instead of leaving it in their ‘to do’ pile. As the authors inside are all previously unpublished, the concept, developed with help from ad agency Draftfcb, acts as a way to ensure that readers engage with as much of the material as possible while they have the chance. The sense of urgency was important for the publishers to encourage readers to give new authors a chance and force them to digest the content quickly.


  1. lovelylittlesimplicities reblogged this from prettyy
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  8. pizza-sex reblogged this from legallyblindobservations
  9. aiwendil-of-the-istari reblogged this from legallyblindobservations and added:
    This isnt dumb. This is to encourage reading. Granted it isnt an amazing attempt at it but it would work with me. I...
  10. infamousnfamous reblogged this from legallyblindobservations and added:
    I’m actually currently doing that with a book I found in the free books bin. But not everyone is as eco-friendly as us...
  11. legallyblindobservations reblogged this from infamousnfamous and added:
    After you read it, you cut a hole into it and you have a little book secret compartment thingy. At least that’s what I’d...
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  15. punkcubspornrepository reblogged this from wakeupnietzsche and added:
    …what’s the point is this a statement
  16. wakeupnietzsche reblogged this from mynameisnotadisease
  17. captain-america-in-the-impala reblogged this from mynameisnotadisease and added:
    But…but…then I’d have to buy a new book if I wanted to read it again?
  18. mynameisnotadisease reblogged this from swingingfromthecastles
  19. rainglazed reblogged this from pushinglackadaisies and added:
    omg bookworm cravings I’m not even joking.
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