Looks like you want Rim Lighting. This does not require any additional passes.
c.f. http://oneclick-code.blogspot.co.uk/2012/01/ios-opengl-es-20-lighting-models-for.html
Note: there's a lot of extra stuff in the example, but the key point is: you compare the normal at each vertex to the direction of your camera's view vector. When they are at right angles, (dot product == 0) apply "full" light. When they are parellel (dot product == length), apply zero light.
varying mediump vec3 OUT_View;
varying mediump vec3 OUT_Light;
varying mediump vec3 OUT_Normal;
varying mediump vec2 OUT_TexCoord;
uniform sampler2D EXT_TEXTURE_01;
uniform sampler2D EXT_TEXTURE_02;
uniform sampler2D EXT_TEXTURE_03;
uniform sampler2D EXT_TEXTURE_04;
void main(void)
{
highp vec4 vDiffuseColor = vec4( 0.0, 0.0, 0.5, 1.0 );
highp float fDiffuseFactor = 0.2 + max ( dot ( OUT_Normal, OUT_Light ), 0.0 );
highp vec4 clr;
if ( fDiffuseFactor < 0.3 )
vDiffuseColor = vDiffuseColor * 0.1;
else
if ( fDiffuseFactor < 0.7 )
vDiffuseColor = vDiffuseColor * 0.5;
else
if ( fDiffuseFactor < 0.8 )
vDiffuseColor = vDiffuseColor;
else
vDiffuseColor = vDiffuseColor * 1.3;
gl_FragColor = vDiffuseColor;
}