An early response to
The Culture of Narcissism commented that Lasch had identified the outcomes in
American society of the decline of the family over the previous century. The book quickly became a bestseller and a talking point, being further propelled to success after Lasch notably visited
Camp David to advise President
Jimmy Carter for his "crisis of confidence" speech of July 15, 1979. Later editions include a new afterword, "The Culture of Narcissism Revisited". Author
Louis Menand argues that the book has been commonly misused by liberals and conservatives alike, who cited it for their own ideological agendas. Menand wrote: Lasch was not saying that things were better in the 1950s, as conservatives offended by countercultural permissiveness probably took him to be saying. He was not saying that things were better in the 1960s, as former activists disgusted by the '
me-ism' of the seventies are likely to have imagined. He was diagnosing a condition that he believed had originated in the nineteenth century. Lasch attempted to correct many of these misapprehensions with
The Minimal Self in 1984. Anthony Elliott writes that
The Culture of Narcissism and
The Minimal Self are Lasch's two best-known books. == Some editions ==