D.B.
Hi C..
I homeschool my two boys (7 and 11). I love to read and they both tell other people they love to read, but it is like pulling teath to get them to read.
I read to them a lot. They love that. I also let them pick books they are interested in (Star Wars for my older son, animal books for my younger one.) They always complain at first, but once they get into the story, they really like it.
One thing that helped my older son was to give him a lot of books that were well below his expected reading ability. He could read those fast and feel proud of himself. He read some of them over and over, and even read to his younger brother. His reading ability improved greatly. That made him feel good about himself and eventually he felt better about reading books at his grade level. You don't have to have her read at grade level, by the way. Since you are homeschooling, that is up to you. I did the same thing with my younger son, having him read "Bob Books" over and over until he felt like he was an excellent reader. Then he wanted to prove it by reading harder books.
What we do now is read all together. We pick a book that both boys are interested in and I read a page, then pass the book to one of the boys to read a page, and we just keep passing (reading aloud.) I don't know if you read the Bible, but the Psalms are a great place to co-read like that since there are many short verses and we can pass it back and forth quickly. You can choose to read a whole page each, or one paragraph, etc.
Also remember that some kids just don't get into reading until they are older. I hated reading all through school and learned to love it once I was out of high school and able to read the novels I wanted instead of what was given to me at school. Give her time and lots of choices. She'll do great!