Hidden Books of the Bible (Answers)

Here are the answers to the "Find the Hidden Books" quiz. If you just stumbled across this page and want to take the quiz first, click here.

      "Listening to a banjo elegantly played is a most delightful treat. Eugene's is a case in point; he makes a lot of solo money, and his is a banjo best described as jewel-toned. A Nielson family might find a tuneful ukelele better to listen to, and even normal; a Chicago family, though, chose an entirely different musical format. The whole issue is not an exact science, truthfully, but a matter of opinion. (On the other hand, judges who want to prove R&B's a better genre for a trumpeter must get remarkably tired from answering charges that it is "bad juju." Despite this, they stick to their lamentations.)
      "Incidentally, food and music together have all the makings of a revelation in these dull times. There are so many possibilities! In Natchez, ratatouille goes well with Verdi; jam especially well with — what else? — a jam session; parsnip salmon, though comic, a happy companion to Haydn's water music. Coffee is not what it used to be; the brew seems to earn only the bibliophile money, leaving everyone else numb. Erstwhile banjos, huarachas, and celestines should only be considered far-fetched attempts to hide more Bible chapters," said the hag gaily.

 
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