Good Soil, Jeff Chu
Good Soil, Jeff Chu
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Good Soil
The Education of an Accidental Farmhand

Author: Jeff Chu

Narrator: Jeff Chu

Unabridged: 9 hr 11 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/25/2025


Synopsis

NATIONAL BESTSELLER • A profound meditation on nature, heritage, and belonging, from an accomplished journalist who left New York City for life on a working farm

“I needed this book. I think you need it, too.”—Maggie Smith, New York Times bestselling author of You Could Make This Place Beautiful

In his late thirties, Jeff Chu left his job as a magazine writer and found himself at Princeton Theological Seminary’s “Farminary”—a twenty-one-acre working farm where students learn to cultivate the earth while examining life’s biggest questions. Now, he unpacks what he learned about creating “good soil,” both literally and figuratively, drawing lessons from the rhythms of growth, decay, and regeneration that define life on the land.

In gorgeous, transporting reflections, Chu introduces us to the cast of characters, human and not, who became his teachers. While observing the egrets that visit the pond, the worms that turn waste into fertile soil, and the Chinese long beans that get passed over in the farm’s CSA, Chu considers our desire to belong, the story behind the food on our plate, and the significance of his own roots. What is the earth trying to tell us, if we’ll only stop and listen?

Good Soil helps readers connect to the land and to one another at a time when we seem drawn most to the phones in our hands. For nature lovers, foodies, and anyone who has daydreamed about a more fulfilling life, this book is a tribute to friendship, to the sacredness of our bond with the natural world, and to how love can grow from the unlikeliest of places.

About Jeff Chu

Jeff Chu is co-curator of Evolving Faith, alongside Sarah Bessey, who founded the gathering with Rachel Held Evans. He is also the author of Does Jesus Really Love Me? and an editor-at-large at Travel+Leisure. He, his husband, Tristan, and their dog, Fozzie, make their home in Grand Rapids, Michigan.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Richard on November 05, 2024

Let me just start with the basics. If I were to pick a favorite book of 2024 right now, it would be Jeff Chu's remarkable "Good Soil: The Education of an Accidental Farmhand." While I expected to appreciate "Good Soil" having become familiar with Chu through his work with the Evolving Faith Conferen......more

Goodreads review by Kristin on February 18, 2025

This is one of those rare, precious books that filled my soul with a glimpse of how, on this muddy planet full of wrongdoing and death, God or love or grace might still be near to us. But it is a grace tinged with sadness, a love marked by loss, a faith that hopes rather than one that knows. I’ve al......more

Goodreads review by Jackie on November 02, 2024

Jeff Chu made me cry, and I’m mad about it. Yes, I have been looking forward to his next book since I read his first one, and yes, I know Jeff has a way of telling stories that you feel deeply in your soul. Though I also do not like letting my emotions out, I cried. Multiple times. A memoir followin......more

Goodreads review by Michele on April 15, 2025

As an avid gardener, I appreciated Chu's foundational metaphor. I'm also a kildeer spectator, a grower of green provider beans, and a listener to the kids who always insisted that beets taste like dirt. His vulnerability seasoned with humor carries a story of hope as he shares his own story alongsid......more

Goodreads review by Cara on April 09, 2025

Soil, theology, food; love, death, and the breathtaking reality of being a human in this messy world. What’s not to love?......more


Quotes

“A big-hearted meditation on belonging, compassion, and the transformative power of friendship . . . I needed this book. I think you need it, too.”—Maggie Smith, New York Times bestselling author of You Could Make This Place Beautiful

“By turns wrenching and funny, heartbreaking and hope-filled, Jeff Chu’s Good Soil teaches us how to keep going despite our own gravest doubts, and how to keep loving when love has already failed us too many times. By whatever name you may call it—God, family, partnership, community, the whole living world—love is what this book is about. At its true heart, this is a book about love.”—Margaret Renkl, New York Times bestselling author of The Comfort of Crows

“A beautiful book on the growth that we spark when we tend to our soil.”—Katherine May, New York Times bestselling author of Wintering and Enchantment

“Reading Good Soil feels like how I imagine it would feel to pull up a chair at one of the agape meals Jeff Chu hosts for beloved friends. He fills a table with fragrant dishes, overflowing with home-grown beans and greens picked just for us. We listen as he reflects on the seasonal rhythms of growing veggies and raising chickens—all because, as Professor Kenda Dean says, ‘we expect love to grow here.’”—The Presbyterian Outlook

“This book is so chock-full of small miraculous moments, in word, in story, in revelation. And the cumulative effect is exactly what I crave when I pick up a book—I feel more connected, a sense of possibility, glad to be alive. Good Soil is a book to keep and a book to give to everyone you love. —R. Eric Thomas, national bestselling author of Here for It

“This book is pure grace for anyone who has wrestled with questions of faith and belonging, offering hard-won insights on who we are and who we might yet become.”—Kate Bowler, New York Times bestselling author of Have a Beautiful, Terrible Day!

“Part memoir, part meditation, Good Soil is an extraordinary work of grace and courage that announces Jeff Chu as a major figure in an emerging field of modern and rigorous Christian thinkers. If Wendell Berry and David Sedaris had a love child, they could only hope he might be as fine a thinker and as funny a writer as Jeff Chu.”—Eliza Griswold, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Amity and Prosperity and Circle of Hope

“Jeff Chu has a gift for loving people he has never met (and may not even like), having decided ahead of time that the best thing any of us can do is pay attention to what gives us life and tell one another about it.”—Barbara Brown Taylor, author of An Altar in the World and Learning to Walk in the Dark

“Delving into the soils that we come from—our families, cultures, communities—we can only humbly let go of the idea that we alone shape our path and that our roots and those around us ‘are inescapably interdependent with the world,’ . . . [Good Soil is] sustenance for the soul found while diving hands into the dirt.”Kirkus Reviews