Reviewing
Destiny in
The Independent, Robert Hanks declared it “an uncommonly satisfying book, richly thoughtful and informative, balancing ideas and their symbols with bewitching preciseness.” For
Valentine Cunningham, writing in
The Times Literary Supplement: “Morley’s modern Germany is given us as a sequence of impossible — shocking, monstrous, buried — facts, which, like the blood of Abel that in the Bible ‘cries out from the ground’, demand explanation. And no one method will, it seems, suffice by itself as an entrée into these horrors.
Destiny refuses to settle for any one thing: story, history, art history, documentary, essay, travel-writing. It will be all of these things in turn. And some of these kinds are done with great power.” In his review of the book in
The Spectator, Tom Hiney said of Morley's prose: "His writing has soul as well as brains and it is this that makes his fiction engaging." == References ==