My preschooler is starting to read. Any tips for precocious preschoolers?

My daughter is turning three in April. She started learning her ABCs at Montessori last year and now they're working on phonics. She sounds out the letters on everything. She can usually figure out the word from there, and with repetition, can tell you about 50% of the words in her favourite book, Snuggle Puppy. If you write the words she knows on a piece of paper, she can tell you what they are (like puppy, mine, fine, love, what)

We sit down to read books and she follows along with her finger and sounds out the words. While the pronunciation is off on words she doesn't know, she "reads" a lot. If she has letters like blocks, she arranges them to spell her first name. She knows her alphabet and can arrange blocks to put them all in the correct order. She is starting to write her name but she doesn't quite have the hand-eye coordination for it.

I've never seen anything like it. The thing that worries me is how she's fitting in with her peers. My two closest friends have started to notice my daughter is different than their kids, and there is some jealousy there. I'm mindful of making sure the toys we have out when they visit are things our girls all play with, like dolls and Little People. I don't put out books or anything with numbers or letters because I don't want them to feel like I'm showing off.

She goes to Montessori and is thriving but I'm aware that not everyone has that advantage. If you have a precocious child, how do you deal with everything that comes along with it?

Edit: I'm not bragging here. I'm trying to figure this out. I'm not sure why people are downvoting me and the comments that are helping.

Edit: By everything that comes along with it, I mean people always pointing out how different she is. She's not a unicorn. I just wish people would stop making her read to them and asking her "What does this say?". As far as I'm concerned, she's a regular almost 3 year old because she is. Her peers look at her like a regular kid, but I know kids are impressionable and will believe what their parents tell them. Parents are jealous but it's not like I parade my daughter around or make comments about her ability to read. I try to hide it because I don't want her to feel different or like she doesn't belong. I also don't want to make her feel superior because that's obnoxious.