HI! I used FIAR too, and I agree with much of what's been said. Here's a short list of what didn't work for us with FIAR:
*the story gets redundant (even by the 3rd. day on some of them)
*the activities are all different levels of difficulty, and it was hit and miss with what really fit my ds's age and ability level
*the length of time activities took varied so much that it was hard to know how much time to plan for homeschool
*I was doing a lot of the activities while my ds watched me, so I began just reading the final point of the activity rather than doing some of them
*the connections were a stretch in some areas
*the math and science were not strong areas, IMO
*I felt it made the books very memorable, but didn't really teach many LA skills that seemed to "stick" with my ds
*there was way too much planning for the parent
*many of the books are OOP, and no revisions have been made to the FIAR books to account for that - to get a year's worth of books (34) I ended up having to buy all of the volumes of FIAR
I liked the books and the concept behind FIAR, but halfway through the year we were only doing it several days a week, and I'd added in science, math, history, art, and FIAR became just the read aloud for the most part.
HOD's guides are complete, age appropriate, fun, doable, and I don't ever find myself skipping activities. Also, it takes the same amount of time to do each day, give or take 15-30 minutes or so. I also like that the Biblical part is woven through everything, rather than a supplement. HTH!
In Christ,
Julie
Oh, I LOVE to cook and I bought the FIAR cookbook too - not a good fit for us! Very strange foods that took a lot to prepare and were a stretch for matching the story very well IMO! I think I only made 2 of them!