Fantasy series with a wrong reading and a right right reading
Some of these distinctions are a little bit too fine to matter and other, more important distinctions, inexplicably, are not made at all.
To take fantasy novels so seriously, J.K. Rowling in fact had an enormous impact on the youth of an entire generation with the Harry Potter series.
In each case the fantasy series is the imagination of one human author, not divine inspiration.

Yet there are many other elements of this universe that have no identifiable parallel. It would be a wrong reading of Narnia to assign great significance to the lamppost, the fawn, or other incidental characters and details. … A right reading of Narnia does not lead to the declaration, “Aslan is Jesus,” but the realization, “Aslan is like Jesus.” …
That's a little bit too much right and wrong to read into anything except the Holy Bible itself. Other than that, Jesus Christ was born of the tribe of Judah whose emblem was a lion.
You can’t be holier-than-thou with a fantasy series as Holy Scripture.
This reminds me of the time when a confederation of North American Great Plains Indians of various tribes exterminated the Finnish law cult of the Fourth Epochal Revelation of the Urantia that had there arisen among Finnish immigrants some time in the 1800s, and destroyed everything they could find of it.
A chief stood there in full regalia holding a copy of the Urantia-kirja, and proclaimed in clear and correct Finnish, “Do not read this book as Holy Scripture!”
Nevertheless to the great exasperation and consternation of the old ones, a few copies of the Urantia-kirja remained unburned, and when they were discovered, brought out and republished by descendants of survivors, there was a so-called Fifth Epochal Revelation in Chicago during the Great Depression. It was certainly affiliated with Al Capone and the Mob.
