Okay, Shannon, I'm joining you in this thinking out loud stuff...
ForHisGlory wrote:...In the past, we have tried AlphaPhonics. I am re-vistiting it again. I myself don't enjoy using it, and I'm not sure Evan does either. I own Phonics Pathways--not sure I like it either (and I've read it over and tried a lesson with him).
I wouldn't use either based on this. Whether we like teaching a program or not, matters. Really matters! There are too many phonics programs out there to use one you don't like, and if Evan doesn't like it, then that's 2 strikes.
ForHisGlory wrote:And I also own McGuffey readers, Spelling to Write and Read (in which I need to teach myself how to use it in order to use it effectively--takes a lot of time to learn the system).
If something takes a lot of time to learn the system, that would be out for me too, but maybe that's the stage of life I'm in. When it comes to phonics, I like it to be straight-forward and easy to implement. Lots of fumbling around, gathering this or that, planning a bunch, it just leaves my child learning the phonics looking at me like, "Wow, this phonics business must be h-a-r-d! Mom looks so flustered."

Again, this really could just be me though.
ForHisGlory wrote: I also have all three complete sets of BOB Books, of which he was reading back when he was 4 yrs. old...
Wow - good for Evan! If he was reading BOB books well at age 4, I am thinking a quick no frills trip through phonics really would do he trick.
ForHisGlory wrote: ...but with all of our family changes, he no longer reads. Anyway, yes, I was a collector of curriculum, and I don't want to be anymore. Please help!!!

He will read again, and he will read well. I am confident of that! I get the wanting to hang up your curriculum collector shoes.
ForHisGlory wrote: I have been leaning toward The Reading Lesson, but I really don't want to spend anymore money unless it's really, really going to work! And then I've pondered Reading Made Easy since it incorporates a caterpillar, and Evan adores caterpillars--but it doesn't look as open and go as TRL. SIGH. What to do...

What would work best for a wiggly worm that doesn't have a super long attention span, but who does seems to want to learn how to read? Evan has a fantastic vocabulary, and has since he was very young. He just can't read. Evan is a wiggly worm
I am thinking TRL would be good. It is just right for wiggly worms. It is no prep, easy to teach, and you can clip along with it. You can get Evan a caterpillar from the pet store or maybe from the backyard

, but for phonics, I think I'd get him TRL.

Whatever you do for phonics, whether it's TRL, something you own, or a different phonics program, the list of things you're looking for looks like this to me (again, I could be off

)...
*easy to use
*little to no prep
*short lesson method for your wiggly guy
*straight-forward, so you can clip along
*nice if it has caterpillars, but not a must
*inexpensive
*something you and Evan can enjoy
HTH as you continue to think this through!
In Christ,
Julie