Scott Davenport grew up in a small Northern California farm town of 10,000 people – the kind of place where people stop for gas, go to the bathroom, and keep on driving. It was -- and still is -- the type of anonymous little town that no one has heard of unless they saw it on a map and, even then, they probably couldn't pronounce it.
As soon as he was able, Scott moved to Southern California where he met his future wife, El. It was to Scott’s great benefit that El ignored his warnings to not get involved with him. They have been together 35 years and currently live in Sunset Beach, a tiny beach community 45 minutes south of Los Angeles.
Scott became an appellate lawyer and won a case at the United States Supreme Court. He is also an avid hockey fan, and even played in an ice hockey beer league for the better part of a decade.
A firm believer that one should write what they know, Scott’s first novel, “The Code,” is a suspense thriller which tracks the lives of two vastly different characters – a career prosecutor and a minor league hockey enforcer – who are both mysteriously summoned to a small Northern California coastal town.