Seeding Hope

What Plants Teach Us About Being Human

Book cover for Seedling Hope: What Plants Teach Us About Being Human by Jack Algiere, with green botanical drawings on pale yellow background.
Pages:240 pages
Size: 5-1/2 x 8-1/2 inch
Publisher:Chelsea Green Publishing
Pub. Date: September 8, 2026
ISBN: 9781645023708

Seeding Hope

What Plants Teach Us About Being Human

Availability: Preorder

Hardcover

$29.95



Is it possible that the most viable and sustainable approaches to farming, to business, to life can be found in the patterns of a plant’s lifecycle?

In Seeding Hope, Jack Algiere, Chief Agroecology Officer (CAO) at Stone Barns, shares the wisdom he’s gained in a lifetime of farming and expanding the agricultural practices of one of the leading sustainable-minded farms and agricultural centers in the country.

This book is directed not just to farmers, but also towards those who desire a more connected and meaningful life—in their home life and in their business careers. By following and examining the stages of a plant’s development, readers gain a greater understanding of how we can engage with nature, how reflecting nature’s patterns benefits our societal health and how this biological progression is key to sustainability in our land, our lives and our ventures.

“[Algiere] is a brilliant farmer because he’s a brilliant observer; he’s spent a lifetime letting plants teach him how to see. In prose as attentive, searching, and grounded as his farming, Jack gathers those lessons into something rare and resonant: a portrait of the natural world as teacher, and an ethic for how to live, drawn from the ground up.
—Dan Barber, Chef, Blue Hill and author of The Third Plate

 

Reviews & Praise

“For two decades at Stone Barns, Jack Algiere has been working out a philosophy of farming as if plants were our teachers. Seeding Hope is both lyrical and far more than pastoral. It is a politics of seed, of land, and of the corporations that have spent a century trying to own all three. Moving through the plant’s three acts of growing, flowering, and fruiting, Algiere refuses the bargain on offer: that the future of food belongs to whoever can engineer it fastest. Instead, in this quiet, lyrical book with a steel spine, Algiere reminds us that the future plants make possible is one we might still choose to share.”—Raj Patel, author of Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System “Jack Algiere brings a farmer’s skill and a philosopher’s curiosity to the ancient conversation between humans and plants. Drawing on the life cycle of plants as a lens for understanding our own lives, Seeding Hope is a thoughtful and generous addition to that evergreen dialogue.”—K Greene, cofounder, Hudson Valley Seed Co.Seeding Hope reflects what I’ve admired most about Jack since we met twenty years ago: He’s a brilliant farmer because he’s a brilliant observer; he’s spent a lifetime letting plants teach him how to see. In prose as attentive, searching, and grounded as his farming, Jack gathers those lessons into something rare and resonant: a portrait of the natural world as teacher, and an ethic for how to live, drawn from the ground up.”—Dan Barber, chef, Blue Hill at Stone Barns; author of The Third Plate “This lovely book is a reflection of the care, attention to detail, and thoughtfulness that Jack brings to everything he does, especially at Stone Barns. It will deepen your understanding, make you think, and bring presence to your relationship with plants.”—Maria Rodale, author of Love, Nature, Magic “There are books about farming, and then there are books from farming—written not at a desk, but from decades of muddy boots, cold greenhouses, and the kind of quiet conversations you have with a row of seedlings before the rest of the world wakes up. Seeding Hope by Jack Algiere belongs firmly in the second category, and for someone like me, who has spent the better part of my adult life with my hands in the soil and my mind trying to articulate why this work matters beyond the harvest, reading it felt less like encountering a new idea and more like finding words for something I have always known but never quite managed to say. I will say this plainly: I was not expecting to be moved the way I was.”—Jean-Martin Fortier, author of The Market Gardener; founder, the Market Gardener Institute
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About Jack Algiere

Jack Algiere is Advisor & Chief Agroecology Officer at the Stone Barns Center. As the organization’s first official employee back in 2003, he brought a critical skill set in diversified, regenerative farm practice to the Stone Barns landscape. Since then, he has built an integrated farming operation rooted in land stewardship, innovation, and community, which also serves as a training campus for young farmers, chefs, changemakers, and the public.

Jack has been actively farming for more than two decades and has trained a generation of young farmers in organic and biodynamic farming practices. He oversees the extensive farming operations at Stone Barns, integrating a holistic farm team that works together on multi-species grass-fed livestock, grains, field crops, greenhouse, fruit, flowers, wild landscapes, and compost in a four-season regenerative system. Jack leads programming in innovative tool design, breeding and monitoring work that supports the efforts of small- and mid-size farmers, and was part of the core team that developed the Conservation Action Plan that led to the management of 350 acres of public lands in the Rockefeller State Park Preserve. He is a frequent public speaker and has appeared at food and farming conferences and summits across the country. He holds a B.S. in horticulture from the University of Rhode Island.

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