69 cents at the gas station across the parking lot, and those come in 32 and 40 oz sizes.
Really the question isn't how much a hamburger costs but rather how much does Vester pay in rent. If I bussed tables for a gourmet restraunt I wouldn't presume I deserve enough money to eat there.
And Job's wife isn't killed IIRC, as she's around to say "Bless God and die," when he suffers boils. Satan was claiming Job was only faithful because things were going well for him. The prevailing notion I'm getting from detractors is that "God is such a jerk to do that." This presumes the detractor has some moral imperitive over God, that somehow they have a better understanding of right and wrong than the creator of the universe. This is what the quote refutes. All of Job's friends were assuming bad things happened to Job because he committed some sin, and the book argues that isn't the case, that bad things happen to good people. Thus the poor or sick are deserving of charity and respect since they are not being punished by their station. You can see what the opposite mentality causes in India, where the fabulously wealthy feel no obligation to drop so much as a penny to a beggar because those people are working off their karma, and to interfere would only mean more time in punishment. So the book of Job exists to stress that human beings do not have a moral imperitive over God, ever, and that good people can suffer and bad people can thrive. In the end Job recieves twice as much as he started with and lives some 140 more years with his wife, so his loss is repaid double. However Job lamented that he wished there was some arbitrator between man and God so that he could plead his case. That arbitrator came to be with Christ.
So yeah, that's the book of Job.