Andrew Unger (born November 8, 1979)[1] is a Canadian novelist and satirist. He is the author of the satirical news website The Unger Review (formerly The Daily Bonnet), as well as the novel Once Removed and the collection The Best of the Bonnet.[2][3]
Career
Since 2010, Unger has been a contributor to numerous publications including The Globe and Mail, Geez, CBC.ca, and Ballast.[4][5] Early in his career, he also wrote and published fiction and poetry, sometimes publishing under the pen name Andrew J. Bergman, as well as working as a ghostwriter for New York-based Kevin Anderson & Associates.[6]
In 2016 Unger founded the Mennonite satirical news website The Daily Bonnet and, along with his wife Erin Koop Unger, the non-satirical website Mennotoba in 2017.[7] Since 2016, Unger has written more than two thousand Daily Bonnet articles.[6] The website has been visited millions of times each year and has been cited in debate in the Manitoba Legislature[8] and used as an example of Mennonite humour in the Canadian House of Commons.[9][10][11]
The son of a Mennonite minister father and book-keeper mother, Unger was born in Winnipeg in 1979 and lived in Steinbach, Brandon and Calgary as a child before returning to Steinbach as an adult.[22] From his father's side, he is a direct descendant of Kleine Gemeinde founder Klaas Reimer, while his maternal grandfather fled to Canada from the Soviet Union as a refugee in the 1920s.[23]
Unger lives in Steinbach, Manitoba and is married to Erin Koop Unger, author of Mennotoba.[27]
In 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Unger successfully advocated for the Manitoba government to create vaccine stickers in the Mennonite dialect of Plautdietsch.[28][29]
In 2024, Unger initiated a fundraiser to place a historic plaque in front of author Miriam Toews's former home in Steinbach.[30]