* "Leyson, who died in January at age 83, was No. 289 on Schindler's list and its youngest member. He was just 13
when Leyson's father convinced Oskar Schindler to let "Little Leyson" (as Schindler knew him) and other family
members find refuge in the Emalia factory; Leyson was so small he had to stand on a box to work the machinery.
Leyson and his coauthors give this wrenching memoir some literary styling, but the book is at its most powerful when
Leyson relays the events in a straightforward manner, as if in a deposition, from the shock of seeing his once-proud
father shamed by anti-Semitism to the deprivation that defined his youth. Schindler remains a kindly but enigmatic
figure in Leyson's retelling, occasionally doting but usually distant. Leyson makes it clear that being "Schindler Jews"
offered a thread of hope, but it never shielded them from the chaos and evil that surrounded them. Readers will close
the book feeling that they have made a genuinely personal connection to this remarkable man."--Publishers Weekly, July 1, 2013, *STARRED REVIEW
* "A posthumous Holocaust memoir from the youngest person on Oskar Schindler's list.
Completed before his death in January 2013, Leyson's narrative opens with glowing but not falsely idyllic childhood
memories of growing up surrounded by friends and relatives in the Polish village of Narewka and then the less
intimate but still, to him, marvelous city of Kraków. The Nazi occupation brought waves of persecution and forced
removals to first a ghetto and then a labor camp--but since his father, a machinist, worked at the enamelware factory
that Schindler opportunistically bought, 14-year-old "Leib" (who was so short he had to stand on the titular box to
work), his mother and two of his four older siblings were eventually brought into the fold. Along with harrowing but not
lurid accounts of extreme privation and casual brutality, the author recalls encounters with the quietly kind and heroic
Schindler on the way to the war's end, years spent at a displaced-persons facility in Germany and at last emigration
to the United States. Leyson tacks just a quick sketch of his adult life and career onto the end and closes by
explaining how he came to break his long silence about his experiences. Family photos (and a picture of the famous
list with the author's name highlighted) add further personal touches to this vivid, dramatic account.
Significant historical acts and events are here put into unique perspective by a participant."--Kirkus Reviews, August 1, 2013, *STARRED REVIEW
"Tragic remembrances of war's sufferings often go untold. However, if we are to "study war no more" we need to hear
them. After long silence Leon Leyson has written his World War II memoir. I am an African American veteran of
World War II. I survived the invasion of Normandy. Leon Leyson's story returned me to a time when the life of each
step could be one's last. THE BOY ON THE WOODEN BOX is a heartbreaking story that ends, mercifully, with a
heart restored."--Ashley Bryan, multiple Coretta Scott King Award-winning author, and former GI.