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Mike McCready Announces Farewell to Seasons Graphic Novel and Companion Rock Opera

Mike McCready performing live with Pearl Jam on stage.
Photo licensed from Dreamstime (Image ID: 227788148). Editorial use.

Pearl Jam guitarist Mike McCready is bringing one of his longest-running personal concepts into public view this fall through a major multi-format release with Z2 Comics. Official listings now confirm Mike McCready’s Farewell to Seasons as a coordinated launch that combines a full graphic novel with a companion vinyl release framed as a “lost” rock opera from inside the story’s universe. All currently listed editions are tied to an October 6, 2026 street date.

For a catalog as established as McCready’s, this is not a routine name-on-a-cover project. Z2 describes Farewell to Seasons as a world developed over roughly two decades, rooted in Seattle’s 1980s and 1990s scene changes, then executed with a full creative team spanning writing, illustration, editorial, and package design. The release is also clearly tiered for different audiences: readers, vinyl buyers, and high-end collectors each have a distinct entry point.

A Seattle story built for comics, not a straight memoir

Z2’s official copy positions Farewell to Seasons as an original narrative set against Seattle’s pre-grunge and post-breakout transition, with attention to both the scene’s creative energy and its losses. That framing matters because it separates this project from a typical retrospective product. The graphic novel is presented as fiction with historical texture, rather than a literal memoir or oral-history package.

McCready is credited in Z2’s listings for his work in Pearl Jam, Temple of the Dog, and Mad Season, and those references are used to place him in the exact cultural era the story explores. The result is a project that borrows emotional truth from a known musical period while still operating as a constructed narrative universe. In practical terms, that means readers are getting a complete authored story, and not a lightly branded coffee-table artifact.

The music component follows that same logic. Z2 describes the companion songs as original material created to function as recordings by fictional lead character Dave Williams. That detail is crucial: the LP is not marketed as a random bonus disc or repackaged archive. It is an in-world extension of the book’s narrative.

What buyers get: three editions, three very different price bands

Z2 currently lists three versions of Farewell to Seasons, each with specific format differences and clear pricing:

  • Standard Edition — hardcover graphic novel, listed at $34.99.
  • Deluxe Edition12″ x 12″ slipcased hardcover plus a limited 11-track vinyl LP in the Rain City Yellow variant, listed at $89.99.
  • Signed Platinum Edition — signed 12″ x 12″ slipcased hardcover, limited 11-track vinyl LP in a Translucent Elliot Bay Green variant, five exclusive show poster prints, and an enamel pin set, listed at $149.99.

The Signed Platinum tier also carries the strongest scarcity signal in the campaign: Z2 lists it as a numbered signed edition limited to 500 copies. That single data point changes the purchase dynamics. Numbered cap plus artist signature tends to pull early demand from both comics collectors and Pearl Jam-adjacent memorabilia buyers, particularly when vinyl color variants are exclusive to upper tiers.

The Deluxe package appears designed to absorb most crossover demand. It includes the oversized format and the soundtrack LP without requiring the signature premium. That positions it as the likely midpoint for fans who want the transmedia experience but are not chasing low-run collectibles.

Confirmed credits show a fully built cross-disciplinary production

One of the strongest parts of the rollout is the amount of concrete crediting already published on Z2’s own pages. The project is not being sold as a one-name celebrity imprint. Official listings identify key contributors across the full production stack:

  • Written by: Mike McCready and Mark Sable
  • Illustrated by: Sebastián Piriz
  • Cover art: R. Kikuo Johnson
  • Edited by: Rantz A. Hoseley
  • Design by: Josh Bernstein and Rantz A. Hoseley
  • Album artwork (Deluxe/Platinum): Daniel Danger

That level of attribution is especially important for a release bridging comics and music culture. It signals that each medium inside the package has dedicated authorship and direction, rather than being treated as peripheral merchandise. For music readers, the Daniel Danger credit on album art is a notable indicator that the LP presentation was conceived as part of the premium object design from the beginning.

It also makes the release easier to evaluate on its own merits. Buyers are not only purchasing a McCready-branded concept; they are buying work from a named creative team with distinct roles in writing, visual language, editorial structure, and package identity.

Release timing, preorder terms, and the details likely to move fastest

All three editions currently display preorder language and an expected ship date of October 6, 2026. Consistent dating across formats can reduce confusion for fans deciding between tiers, especially when books and vinyl are bundled in the same campaign.

Z2’s Deluxe and Signed Platinum pages also include a time-bound preorder bonus: a “Shadow concert ticket” preserved in a collector case for orders placed before March 25, 2026. That is one of the most actionable details in the entire rollout because it introduces a clear decision deadline before release day.

As with most collector-led campaigns, inventory language can change quickly, particularly in signed and numbered tiers. The strongest verifiable snapshot today is what appears directly on the official product pages: active listings, defined package contents, posted prices, named creative credits, and a shared target ship date.

Why this launch matters beyond one fanbase

McCready’s Farewell to Seasons arrives at a moment when established artists are increasingly building narrative ecosystems instead of single-format products. Here, the strategy is explicit: a story universe in hardcover, original songs positioned as in-world artifacts, variant vinyl manufacturing, and tiered collector architecture under one branded release window.

The Seattle backdrop gives the project immediate cultural legibility, but the mechanics are forward-looking. This is less about nostalgia repackaging and more about structured transmedia storytelling aimed at multiple buyer behaviors: read-only, read-and-listen, and premium collectible ownership. If the campaign performs, it reinforces a broader template the industry is testing in 2026—using physical objects and narrative framing to create event value in an always-on streaming environment.

For fans, the near-term picture is straightforward and verifiable: three clearly differentiated editions, specific track-count and vinyl variant information on premium tiers, a numbered signed cap at 500 in Platinum, and a published preorder bonus window ending March 25. For the market, it is another signal that legacy rock artists can still open new commercial lanes when the format design is intentional and the storytelling is built as a complete world, not just an add-on.

Primary Sources

  • Z2 Comics (Official) — Mike McCready’s Farewell to Seasons (Standard Edition): https://z2comics.com/products/mike-mccready-s-farewell-to-seasons-standard-edition
  • Z2 Comics (Official) — Mike McCready’s Farewell to Seasons + Vinyl LP (Deluxe Edition): https://z2comics.com/products/mike-mccready-s-farewell-to-seasons-vinyl-lp-deluxe-edition
  • Z2 Comics (Official) — Mike McCready’s Farewell to Seasons + Vinyl LP (Signed Platinum Edition): https://z2comics.com/products/mike-mccready-s-farewell-to-seasons-vinyl-lp-signed-platinum-edition

Featured image credit: Dreamstime, Image ID 227788148.

Image source: Dreamstime.

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