Voici sa réponse :
Q: Which fantasy book first published within in the last 10 years do you think will be considered a classic?
Hal Duncan : I'm going to pick two short story collections actually, because I can't decide between Kelly Link's Magic For Beginners and Jeffrey Ford's The Empire Of Ice Cream. Link and Ford are, as far as I'm concerned, the best short story writers I know of writing at the moment. Both have incredible range. Both can go from the most charming and accessible tale -- "The Faery Handbag" or "The Annals of Eelin-Ok" -- to the most strange and estranging weirdness -- "Lull" or "Giant Land." Reading those books... to me that's where fantasy's at; Link and Ford show just how much you can do in the field. In terms of quality, I could as easily pick earlier collections of theirs, in truth -- Link's Stranger Things Happen or Ford's The Fantasy Writer's Assistant -- except that the later collections just pip them to the post when it comes to personal preference. Partly, it's on the strength of the title story in each; both "Magic for Beginners" and "The Empire of Ice Cream" are just awesome.
And as much as it's a matter of wanting these to be classics, thinking they deserve to be, I genuinely reckon they had/have the impact necessary to make them classics, to keep them being talked about. Because that's as much the question here as anything; it's not just, "What's your favourite book from the last decade?" but "What do you think people will still be talking about in 10, 20, 30 years time?" And I reckon both of those books will be remembered -- deservedly so.