The LM3909 was not a cheap IC, nor was the the supporting circuitry (it needed a "big" capacitor.)
On top of that, it produced really wimpy flashes (you know: discharging a 300uF through the LED, essentially.)Anyone who wanted a blink LED found it cheaper and better to just add a second battery cell, or use a lithium cell.
It was sort-of neat, but a Joule Thief is neater. (Is there a flashing Joule Thief?)
(There have been some interesting circuits posted of semi-conventional microcontroller circuits that drive their own step-up converter to allow them to run off a single cell, after an initial button-press provides the first pulse of high-enough voltage. These days you can get microcontrollers with built-in boost regulators and/or very low-voltage operation, so a primitive circuit that does little more than flash an LED isn't all that interesting. (although the people who think that a 555 can "do the same thing" as a 3909 are missing the point...)