Julian Lemm built his empire the American way: ambition, risk, speed, and ruthless control. From a hundred dollars and an empty office, he rose to own one of the tallest buildings in New York. But success came with a price. One by one, the people around him disappeared, until all that remained was silence, whisky, and a man who no longer recognized himself.
One night, after drinking alone in his office, Julian awakens in a strange version of Heaven, a surreal and darkly humorous place where former employees, forgotten friendships, and painful truths wait for him behind every corner. There, he is welcomed not as a hero, but as “Satan,” a man who slowly turned his company into a personal hell without realizing it.
Guided by unsettling encounters with people he once fired, ignored, or hurt, Julian is forced to confront the difference between power and meaning, between winning and living. What begins as absurd satire slowly transforms into something deeper: a journey through guilt, loneliness, memory, and redemption.
Satan in Heaven is a philosophical tragicomedy about modern success, human disconnection, and the terrifying moment when a man finally sees himself clearly. Beneath its humor and surreal imagery lies a deeply human question:
What remains of a person after ambition has consumed everything else?