Keith,
Hmmm, a one-sentence book.
In order to get people to read it, the narration will have to be followable, which means that the author will have to write the equivalent of sentences, with breaks supplied by pauses (…), semicolons, and other punctuation. It is a shame that this article does not have a single example of what a part (say, five lines) of such a sentence would look like.
This reminds me of the stunt of writing a whole book without once using the letter "e". I have read snippets of such a book, and the text reads surprisingly well. Unless you knew beforehand that no "e" occurs in the book, you might not notice its absence.
Mark Spahn