I have successfully used GOCR in the past for small image OCR. I would say accuracy was around 85%, after getting the grayscale options set properly, on fairly regular fonts. It fails miserably when the fonts get complicated and has trouble with multiline layouts.
Also have a look at Ocropus, which is maintained by Google. Its related to Tesseract, but from what I understand, its OCR engine is different. With just the default models included, it achieves near 99% accuracy on high-quality images, handles layout pretty well and provides HTML output with information concerning formatting and lines. However, in my experience, its accuracy is very low when the image quality is not good enough. That being said, training is relatively simple and you might want to give it a try.
Both of them are easily callable from the command line. GOCR usage is very straightforward; just type gocr -h
and you should have all the information you need. Ocropus is a bit more tricky; here's a usage example, in Ruby:
require 'fileutils'
tmp = 'directory'
file = 'file.png'
`ocropus book2pages #{tmp}/out #{file}`
`ocropus pages2lines #{tmp}/out`
`ocropus lines2fsts #{tmp}/out`
`ocropus buildhtml #{tmp}/out > #{tmp}/output.html`
text = File.read("#{tmp}/output.html")
FileUtils.rm_rf(tmp)