Interestingly, literary critics at LitMir note that Andreyev seemingly predicts weapons of mass destruction, warning humanity about its own inventive path toward self-annihilation.

Andreyev, a pioneer of , wrote this while witnessing the horrors of World War I and the Russian Revolution. His "Wandergood" isn't just a character; he’s a lens through which we see the terrifying capacity of humans to out-evil the devil.

What happens when the Prince of Darkness decides to take a vacation in the mortal world? In most stories, he’s the ultimate puppet master. But in final novel, Satan’s Diary (Дневник Сатаны) , written in 1919, the devil gets a rude awakening. The Plot: A Mortal Masquerade

Satan’s Diary is a dark, philosophical journey that asks a chilling question: If the Devil came to Earth today, would he even recognize us, or would he just be another face in the crowd?

Satan takes on the persona of an American billionaire, Henry Wandergood, and arrives in Rome with grand plans to toy with humanity. He expects to find easy prey for his ancient deceits. Instead, he finds a world so deeply cynical, greedy, and "evolved" in its cruelty that he—the literal embodiment of evil—looks like a naive amateur by comparison. Why It’s Still Relevant