My mum has often told me that I started reading things when I was 2. I think much of my reading skills came from watching TV and from our Speak & Spell, which for me at the time was absolutely the best toy ever made, ever.

Myself, I was never a good reader, and I remember struggling a lot throughout school. It wasn't really until my last 2 years of school and also when I hit University that I was able to really enjoy reading the books that were there. I personally put that down to having two excellent English teachers at the time.
I think my very first book was "The Very Hungry Caterpillar", a book which I'm sure everyone has read by now, and which has had a major impact on my life. Sadly, my ascendancy to Butterfly status has yet to materialise.
LAST WEEK AHAHAHAHAHHAHAHA
No but seriously, I think I learned to read pretty early (definitely if I was anything like my daughter when I was her age), but I don't remember getting into "proper" books (ie not graphic novels) until much much later than everyone else, I think the first time I finished a novel I was 15. God that's embarrassing to admit. It was a Red Dwarf book as well, "Last Human" if I remember rightly.
Another horrible thing to admit is that reading can often make my eyes sore and give me headaches so I don't do anywhere near as much of it as any of you do. Audiobooks are my savior.
Mix these two answers and that's me.
My mam used to read to me all the time when I was young, but my grandad wasn't a good reader due to (he believed) being educated at a Catholic school, so he always tried his best to teach me to read.
I was never a very good reader at primary school, and it wasn't until I was around 13-14 when I was off school sick, and spotted a Red Dwarf book (which I read in 4 or 5 hours) that I got in to reading for fun. Even after that I had a hard time with a lot of books, but I started to buy and read more for fun, rather than just school work.
Now I have hundreds of books, can sometimes get through 3-5 books a week, other times out of no where I get bogged down and can't get anywhere with a book for weeks/months at a time.