L'innominabile by Samuel Beckett

A relentlessly self-questioning, voice-driven monologue follows a nameless narrator who refuses labels and yet cannot stop telling of existence, memory and failure; stranded between speech and silence, it interrogates whether identity can be held in language as it drills inward through repetitions, negations and bleak humor, collapsing action into the pure pressure of words until the possibility of ending — or of being — becomes uncertain.