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Sunshine

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Awakened by the sun, a little girl proceeds to wake her parents and sees that they all leave the house on time.

28 pages, Library Binding

First published September 1, 1981

1 person is currently reading
242 people want to read

About the author

Jan Ormerod

153 books21 followers
Jan Ormerod grew up in the small towns of Western Australia, with three older sisters, and as a child she drew constantly and compulsively. She went to art school and studied drawing, painting and sculpture. After completing her degree, Jan become an Associate of the Western Australian Institute of Technology and Design in Education, taught in secondary schools on enrichment programmes, and lectured in teacher’s college and art schools. Jan's first picture book, "Sunshine", won the Mother Goose Award in 1982 and was highly commended for the Kate Greenaway Medal. Her recent titles include "Ben Goes Swimming", "Emily Dances", "Who’s Who on Our Street?", " A Twist in the Tail" and "Ponko and the South Pole".
http://www.walkerbooks.com.au/authors...

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5 stars
86 (45%)
4 stars
59 (30%)
3 stars
32 (16%)
2 stars
10 (5%)
1 star
4 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 34 reviews
Profile Image for Hilary .
2,294 reviews491 followers
October 21, 2019
This slice of 70s life picture book shows a young girl waking up bright and early and getting ready for school, her parents aren't quite so prepared but they all manage to make it out of the house with nothing worse happening than some burnt toast.

A lovely picture book with no text, great to look through alone or tell someone what is happening and make up your own stories, names and voices.

Read on open library.
Profile Image for J. Boo.
768 reviews29 followers
June 8, 2016
Rather sweet wordless picture book featuring a little girl's waking-up routine. Both DD(3) and DS(5) liked it.

I hope - but highly doubt - it inspires them to let me take a nap in the morning.
Profile Image for Honey.
93 reviews6 followers
November 21, 2017
Well it's no secret that I adore Jan Ormerod. Her illustrations are poignant, classic, subtle and at times hilarious. What I love about this wordless book is the relatable story line where a little girl is getting ready for the day and ends up "saving" the day by getting her family out the door on time. Ormerod's subtle use of color to convey emotion or even an impending disaster ("burning toast!) is unparalleled. Now, to be honest, I don't usually like books with only pictures. I feel pressure when I'm reading them with kids to get the story "right." But this book is an exception and one with a permanent place on our book shelves.
Profile Image for Gail Chilianis.
82 reviews3 followers
July 11, 2015
A lovely picture book I shared with my 4 year old granddaughter..she was excited to see ' no words' and she went straight into telling her version of the story ..I'm pretty sure she would have given it 5 stars.! She also enjoyed listening to two other stories by Jan Ormerod ..Itsy Bitsy Babies and The Swap.
Profile Image for B.P..
172 reviews3 followers
Read
June 23, 2015
Lovely early 80s illustrations - no text - story is about a young girl getting ready in the morning - waking up parents, preparing breakfast, getting dressed, going to toilet etc.
305 reviews3 followers
January 8, 2019
The book is told through pictures without text and tells a girl's morning routine. Suitable for young children.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Nicole Palmer.
2 reviews6 followers
January 24, 2018
When I picked up this book at the library with absolutely no words I thought how the heck am I going tackle this? But I was pleasantly surprised.
Sunshine by Jan Ormerod tells a simple story of the often complicated routine of a mother, father and young daughter waking up of a morning and getting ready to face the day. The beautiful and expressive detail of the illustrations make this rather simple tale quite an enthralling read. I know i is hard to fathom reading a wordless book but instead it forces you to take a moment or two and read the finer details of the individual pictures. The facial expressions, the clothes, the body language, the actions, the time of day and the belongings around the house . Preschoolers, who at this age are making so many observations in life generally will relish in being able to tell this story themselves as they see it. This narrative also explores simple independent tasks such as getting breakfast, brushing teeth, doing hair and getting dressed which children this age can relate to and compare with their own experiences.
So how did I verbally explore this book in my own words? I just observed as many things as possible in each frame pointing to them and asking my daughter what she thought. Before long she was joining in too ended up having this really fantastic conversational style story telling experience. For example "Who is that? It looks like a little girl. She asleep in her bed. Oh look, now she's rubbing her eyes and yawning, she must be waking up. The sunshine is coming through the window, that means its morning time. She has a bed just like yours." and so on. The wonderful thing is that there's no right or wrong in this and more often than not your fellow reader will end up telling the story for you.
This book was first published in 1981 so it has a lovely nostalgic quality to it but I believe its story is still as relevant today. Not much has changed about a morning routines with children despite the fashion and the hair! This story is so warm and enlightening in the most subtle of ways, I guess just like beam of sunshine.
Profile Image for Sally Edsall.
376 reviews11 followers
May 8, 2017
This is a first-rate book. Won the Children's book Council Children's Picture Book of the Year Award in 1982.

Ormerod's textless illustrations of a family's early morning activities is superb. The little girl,creeps into mum and dad's bed in the morning (the alarm closck tells us it is 7.20, kisses dad, and then helps him prepare breakfast (the toast burns as he reads the paper). They take breakfast into mum, still in bed. mum goes back to sleep, and dad gets lost in the paper. Our heroine gets herself dressed and toileted. It's now 8.25, and a rush ensues as Mum and dad leap out of bed to get going.
Absolutely delightful. Lots of fodder for children's imagination, and sequencing skills - some of the pics are in strip cartoon format.

There is a sequel, moonlight, about activities at the other end of the day, which is just as delightful.
A timeless classic; thoroughly recommended. It was a firm bedtime favourite in our house from about age 2 1/2 on.
Profile Image for SBC.
1,472 reviews
October 22, 2023
I picked this up from the library with my toddler. I'd heard of Jan Ormerod but never ready any of their work, and this book was a reprint "Celebrating Forty Years."

It is a wordless picture book, told only in illustrations, and the plot is very simple: a little girl wakes up early, wakes up her father, they get breakfast, then take breakfast to her mum, she gets herself dressed, then lets her parents know the time, they rush to get ready, and everyone leaves home for the day.

The book was copyrighted 1981 but the setting is very reminiscent of the seventies - hair styles, clothes, colours. A snapshot of both a normal day in the life of a child and of a moment in history.

Foreword by Australian author-illustrator Freya Blackwood.
Profile Image for Rachel.
51 reviews1 follower
February 15, 2018
This is a wordless picture book which depicts a little girl waking earlier than her parents and going about her day. It shows her taking responsibility, for example cleaning her teeth and getting herself dressed. Each illustration is in a frame however there is usually one aspect that goes over the edge of the frame. The colours used are quite dull with some parts eg her red dressing gown brighter than the rest which draw the eye.
Profile Image for Nitoy Gonzales.
442 reviews19 followers
December 19, 2025
Jan Ormerod brings her awesomeness in storytelling through illustrations here. She's the "queen of mundane-ness" of picture book. She brings out the greatness of ordinary life into something epic by just being simple. The sequential that spreads through one or two pages are delightful and charming to follow. Look at this sample:
description


I also love the funky look of the dad.LOL.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
4,936 reviews60 followers
May 15, 2025
The sunshine wakes us a little girl in the morning. She proceeds to wake up her dad, who makes her breakfast and then they take breakfast to mom, after which the parents fall back asleep. When the little girl is finished getting herself ready, all of a sudden everyone is late. I finished this book thinking, "What's the point?"
23 reviews
October 1, 2025
This has grown on me. A little girl gets up in the morning, wakes her parents, and they get ready to leave the house. All pictures (they're lovely).
I like the bit where Mama has breakfast brought to her in bed by Daddy and the little girl and then goes back to sleep whilst the other two read. S likes the bit where the little girl has a pee and brushes her teeth.
16 reviews
October 3, 2020
A great picture book that has the story line of a young girl and her morning routine with her parents. It is simple to follow with the pictures and could stimulate talk and discussions about what is happening in each scene with younger children.
Profile Image for Peacegal.
11.7k reviews102 followers
October 22, 2019
This wordless picture book depicts one family's morning as they wake up, make breakfast, get dressed, and nearly run late! Just a simple story showing time progression and cause and effect.
1,038 reviews4 followers
November 15, 2021
Beautifully illustrated wordless story of the morning routine. A classic to be treasured
Profile Image for EmBee.
4 reviews
November 1, 2021
Such a classic, the pictures have stayed with me since childhood.. love the aesthetic and the subtle humour and the sweetness..
Profile Image for Ella Zig.
401 reviews1 follower
August 31, 2014
this book has no text, thus only illustrations.

i found it to be so fascinating. my son and i made up our own story, what the reader should do,
but we also compared it to how we get ready in the morning. no, i did not use a venn diagram, tempted, but no.
we found the similarities and differences and had a blast doing it.

this is the story of a girl waking her parents up, eating breakfast and getting ready for the day.
the little bit of sunshine in the morning wakes her up, cue title.

i thought the illustrations were beautiful, intriguing, engrossing and unique.

highly recommend.
Profile Image for Lauren.
52 reviews22 followers
July 25, 2009
i love this little book of illustrations!
1. my dad always (since i was born) calls me sunshine.
2. the illustrations are so beautiful and simple.
3. the parents are so interestingly drawn, so real, so normal!
1,087 reviews20 followers
June 21, 2012
This wordless picture book deals with the commonplace, ordinary events of a morning. The pictures do convey a story, but it's pretty hard to tell an engaging story just in pictures, without words. This one didn't quite work for me.
Profile Image for Kelly Morgan.
95 reviews1 follower
December 3, 2012
This book is a wordless picture book. This book deals with the mathematics skill, addition. Just like in the book "Get up and Go!" we follow the character throughout the story to see how long it will take her to settle down.
Profile Image for Susan.
Author 2 books7 followers
February 19, 2010
wordlessly, the illustrations capture the essence of an everyday morning at a little girl's house as she and her parents rise, eat, scurry about and dress, and get out the door.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 34 reviews

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