display: block;
font-weight: bold;
font-size: 1.2em;
- padding: 4rem 0 1rem 0;
+ width: 100%;
+ box-sizing: border-box;
+ padding: 4rem 0 1rem 5vw;
}
.Bookshelf {
list-style-type: none;
width: 100%;
+ overflow-y: scroll;
+ box-sizing: border-box;
+ padding: 0 5vw;
white-space: nowrap;
}
<h1>Ben's Bookshelf</h1>
</header>
<hr />
+ <ol class="Timeline" id="timeline"></ol>
<main>
- <ol class="Timeline" id="timeline"></ol>
<p>
Before 2021 I hadn't read much since middle school. As a kid I loved to
read, but all the garbage I had to read in high school and college
author: { name: 'Scott Hahn', abbr: 'Hahn' },
raiting: 4,
},
+ {
+ title: 'The Ratzinger Report',
+ author: { name: 'Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger', abbr: 'Ratzinger' },
+ rating: 4,
+ },
],
};
@import url('./colors.css');
-@import url('https://fonts.larson.zone/lingua-franca/index.css');
+/* @import url('https://fonts.larson.zone/lingua-franca/index.css'); */
* {
font-family: inherit;
<li>
<h4><i>Heliand</i></h4>
A modern English translation of the <i>Heliand</i> would be super
- cool. the <i>Heliand</i> is an Old Saxon (different from Old Enlgish,
+ cool. The <i>Heliand</i> is an Old Saxon (different from Old Enlgish,
but similar) poem about the life of Jesus. It was written in the style
of other Saxon/Germanic literature of the time (AD 800-1000) as a way
to make the Gospels less foreign to Saxon dudes who knew nothing about