Location from Twilight by Stephenie Meyer
Charlie Swan's small two-bedroom house in Forks — Bella's reluctant home, where she learns to live in a town she didn't choose and a life that's about to become unrecognizable.
The Swan house is where the mundane and the supernatural collide in the most domestic way possible. Charlie has lived here alone since Renee left, and the house shows it — he's a good man but not a homemaker. When Bella moves in, she takes over the cooking and the house gets marginally more livable. The most significant feature is Bella's bedroom window, which Edward uses as his personal entrance for months of watching her sleep before she knows about it (and then after, which is arguably weirder). The house is where Charlie exists in blissful ignorance of the vampire-werewolf conflict consuming his daughter's life, where Bella suffers through months of catatonic depression in New Moon, and where the ordinary human stakes of the story are grounded. Charlie grilling steaks. Bella doing homework. Normal life happening feet away from ancient supernatural drama.
A modest, white two-story house with a small front porch. Charlie's police cruiser sits in the driveway. Inside, it's a bachelor pad that's been a bachelor pad for seventeen years — functional furniture, a flat-screen TV perpetually tuned to sports, a kitchen where Charlie eats cereal for dinner. Bella's room upstairs is small, with a creaky rocking chair, a desk, and a window that Edward climbs through at night. The purple bedspread is the most color in the entire house.
Also known as: the Swan house, Charlie's house, Bella's house, the Swan residence