Entertainment
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Her Majesty The Queen Kicks Off Scotland's National Year of Reading
National Literacy Trust
January 19, 2026•3 days ago

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Her Majesty The Queen launched Scotland's National Year of Reading to combat declining reading enjoyment among young people. The initiative, supported by authors and partners, encourages engagement with interests like music and sport. Research indicates a need for passion-based reading materials, with comics proving popular. The campaign aims to inspire reading through diverse formats.
Her Majesty The Queen launched the National Year of Reading in Scotland on Monday 19 January 2026, alongside Scottish authors, local primary school children and Dennis the Menace, at the National Library of Scotland in Edinburgh.
The once-in-a-generation initiative from the Department for Education and the National Literacy Trust, of which Her Majesty is Patron, seeks to address the steep decline in the nation’s reading enjoyment.
The launch in Scotland comes as our new research Children and young people’s reading in Scotland in 2025 reveals that:
just 3 in 10 (30.3%) children and young people aged 8 to 18 said they enjoyed reading in their free time, and
only 1 in 6 (16.8%) said they read daily in their free time.
To help address this challenge, the campaign asks the nation to ‘Go All In’ on their interests and passions and (re)discover how reading can unlock the things they already love – from music and sport to films, food and family time – in whatever way works for them.
The events in Scotland follow the National Year of Reading launch at Emirates Stadium in London on Tuesday 13 January 2026.
Backing the campaign, award-winning Scottish authors Jackie Kay, Val McDermid and Sir Ian Rankin were unveiled as National Year of Reading ambassadors at today’s event. Government, business and charity partners including Education Scotland, DC Thomson, Scottish Book Trust and The Scottish Library and Information Council (SLiC) also showed their support.
Tapping into the power of comics
Underscoring the principles of the ‘Go All In’ campaign, our new research reveals that children and young people in Scotland who don’t currently enjoy reading said that finding reading materials based on their passions, as well as visual media, would motivate them to read. The research also found song lyrics, fiction, non-fiction and comics to be the most popular reading materials for Scotland’s children and young people.
Today’s launch event used the power of comics to engage Scotland’s children and young people with reading and saw Beano immerse 150 local school children in the magic of reading, writing and illustrating comics.
Using a bespoke three panel Beano comic strip featuring The Queen and Dennis the Menace as a story starter – a special print of which was later presented to Her Majesty by pupils – Beano’s Directors of Mischief (Mike Stirling) and Mayhem (Craig Graham) worked with local pupils from and The Queen herself to create a mischievous National Year of Reading comic strip.
The National Literacy Trust’s work in Scotland
Working together with a network of national, local and community partners, the National Literacy Trust will lead the delivery of the National Year of Reading in Scotland. We are committed to supporting communities across the UK where low literacy and poverty are having the greatest impact on people’s lives.
In Scotland, we work intensively in Dundee, where despite overall improvements in literacy achievement seen since 2017, the gap between pupils from the most and least deprived areas has remained relatively steady.
More broadly across the country, in response to research indicating that 1 in 4 (25%) primary schools in Scotland does not have a library, we have worked with Penguin Books through our joint Libraries for Primaries campaign to transform library spaces in 100 Scottish primary schools - including Granton Primary School and Clovenstone Primary School, whose pupils attended the National Year of Reading event in Scotland.
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