Final line of the novel, as whispered by Ricca to a dying cherub: “Do not pray for wings. Pray for the courage to fall.”
Unlike power-fantasy protagonists, Ricca loses constantly. She wins battles but loses moral ground. In one infamous chapter (“The Orphanage of Glass Tears”), she saves a village from a demon only to discover the demon was the village’s last protector against a noble’s army. The novel’s haunting refrain— “A knight with two wings can never fly” —underscores its theme: true justice is impossible within a corrupt system. The Fairy Tale of Holy Knight Ricca- Two Winged...
By E. Otaku, Anime News Network
First published in 2008 as a web novel and later adapted into a single-volume illustrated story in 2011, Two Winged… has developed a cult following for its deconstruction of both the “holy knight” and “magical girl” tropes—long before such subversions became mainstream. Final line of the novel, as whispered by
In a surprise announcement that has sent shockwaves through collector circles and niche isekai forums, the long-out-of-print light novel series The Fairy Tale of Holy Knight Ricca: Two Winged… is officially receiving a deluxe reprint in Spring 2025. In one infamous chapter (“The Orphanage of Glass
Despite never receiving an anime adaptation, Two Winged… has inspired fan art, piano suites, and even a brief mention in a 2019 essay on “pre- Madoka magical girl deconstruction.” The original 2011 print run (only 5,000 copies) now sells for upwards of $300 on secondary markets.