Article snippet: In Hideo Yokoyama’s “Six Four,” a Japanese policeman searches for two lost teenagers, one of them his own daughter. By TERRENCE RAFFERTY Frank Zimring’s “When Police Kill” and Barry Friedman’s “Unwarranted” take up the case of police use of force and surveillance. By BILL KELLER In his new biography “Jonathan Swift: The Reluctant Rebel,” John Stubbs explores the complex life of the man who penned “Gulliver’s Travels.” By JAMES McNAMARA In “Almost Complete Poems,” his latest attempt to earn the title poet, Stanley Moss reflects on his life, talents and quest for spiritual strength. By STEPHEN BURT Sheelah Kolhatkar, whose “Black Edge” traces the insider trading scandal at SAC Capital, is a former fund analyst herself. By GREGORY COWLES Some of our favorite books by and about presidents from the past few decades. By RADHIKA JONES and PAMELA PAUL Margaret Drabble’s “The Dark Flood Rises” is a fictional road trip through various forms of “senior living” in Britain. By CYNTHIA OZICK The author, most recently, of “Lincoln in the Bardo” on his favorite genre: “I love reading anything about gigantic animate blobs of molten iron who secretly long to be conce... Link to the full article to read more