Read this excerpt from a historical fiction story. As you read, look for details that tell you the passage is fiction.

I looked up at my grandfather in the dim light. Dust from our hasty entry into the cellar swirled around us. But even in the failing light, I could see the grim look on his face--the pain as he watched everything go up in flames. Like rats hiding in a hole, we stayed quiet as the destruction of everything we owned continued deep into the night. Finally, the flames were doused by a gentle rain, and the whoops and hollers of the raiding men disappeared into the night.

"Abuelo," I asked in a small voice, "why?"

My grandfather sighed. "La revolución here in Mexico ended three years ago," he said tiredly, "but little has changed for most people. They break their backs on the land, but they do not own it. They make little and eat even less." He stopped and looked up at a distant star. "And they are angry because we have and they do not. But we . . ." he pounded his fist against the cellar wall. "We helped them. We paid fair wages. We gave them good homes to live in." He paused and sighed loudly, "Still, we have too much. They have so little."

Which details show that this excerpt is an example of historical fiction? Choose all correct answers.

details of a scene that the author imagines

details about life in Mexico after the Revolution ended

a description of how people might have felt in 1923

facts about Mexico's economy in the 1920s
(there is not only one answer)