The book remains in print, and writers continue to discuss its influence, particularly the section on financial bubbles. (See Goldsmith and Lewis, below.) • Financier
Bernard Baruch credited the lessons he learned from
Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds with his decision to sell all of his stock ahead of the
Wall Street crash of 1929. •
Kurt Vonnegut's
Slaughterhouse-Five references the book. • The book was the initial inspiration for
Richard Condie's
National Film Board of Canada animated short film
John Law and the Mississippi Bubble (1978). •
Forbes magazine compared Mackay's descriptions of financial bubbles to the
Chinese stock bubble of 2007, claiming that the "
emotional feedback loop" that drove the Chinese market was very similar to what Mackay described. •
Neil Gaiman borrows from the title in an issue of his popular comic series,
The Sandman, in a story featuring a writer whose novel is titled "... And the Madness of Crowds". • Author and executive coach
Marshall Goldsmith discussed the book in depth in
BusinessWeek, drawing extensive parallels between the financial bubbles Mackay wrote about and financial bubbles today. Other writers also frequently point to the book to explain recent financial bubbles. • Financial writer
Michael Lewis includes the financial mania chapters in his book
The Real Price of Everything: Rediscovering the Six Classics of Economics as one of the six great works of economics, along with writings by
Adam Smith,
Thomas Robert Malthus,
David Ricardo,
Thorstein Veblen, and
John Maynard Keynes. •
James Surowiecki, in
The Wisdom of Crowds (2004), takes a different view of crowd behavior, saying that under certain circumstances, crowds or groups may have better information and make better decisions than even the best-informed individual. • Canadian author
Louise Penny used MacKay as an inspiration for her 2021 novel
The Madness of Crowds. • American synthpop band
Information Society released a song titled after the book in 2021. Its vocals are mostly samples of cult leader
Jim Jones. == See also ==