American artist Lynd Ward discovered a copy of Nückel's book in New York in 1929 and was inspired by it to create wordless novels of his own, beginning with the same year. The success of both ''Gods' Man
and the subsequent Madman's Drum (1930) led to a number of American publishers bringing other wordless novels into print, including Destiny'' in 1930, which sold well in the US. Literary scholar Martin S. Cohen called
Destiny "perhaps the most pathetic ... and one of the most memorable" examples of the wordless novel genre. Wordless novel scholar David Beronä judged the book "a pioneering work in the development of the contemporary graphic novel" for the complexity of its plot, its social consciousness, and its focus on an individual character. Reviewer Christian Gasser commended the book's "narrative pull", which he credited as creating a "haunting, edgy narrative rhythm" of a story of persecution, satire, and Expressionist art. The story, he suggests, may be allegory of the
Weimar Republic in which it arose. ==Notes==