In 'Least of all Saints' Grace Irwin has brought into vital focus the kind of religious conflict that anyone concerned with both reason and faith cannot long avoid. Her main concern is with a human being - Andrew Connington - and the human problem - beleif and unbelief. And to make these come powerfully alive for the reader she has choosen to embody her vision of the religious struggle not in the grossly sentimental characters and events that are found in so many "religious" novels, but in charecters and events made real by their expression of the hard realities of Christian faith and human sin, especially those deceptive sins of thought and word if not deed.
"Perhaps the most outstanding Christian novel I have read" - Dr. Frank E. Gaebelein