The characters in the novel confess, tell stories about themselves and others, and you have to figure out which person is speaking from the story. The author's observations are special, which, despite the somewhat elevated style of the nobility, are refreshing, as he writes about himself with mild irony, is self-critical and humorous. He responds to social events and politics, reveals his spiritual horizon and adds some information from zoology. The central narrator in the novel Cadillac Heaven is Baroness Adelma von Vay, a real historical figure who, in direct contact and at a distance, healed the sick, prophesied and read other people's thoughts, and knew how to control the consciousness and body of other people. She wrote nine books, and in the novel Adelma tells about her successes, which are actually some kind of miracles. The writer's description of the Baroness's actions could possibly be classified as magical or fictional realism, but this is only one of the characteristics of Kodrič's artistic creation. The spirit of the times also intrudes into Adelma's theosophical endeavors and activities and her departure from the Catholic faith. Social stratification is evident, one could say traces of class division.

