Boucher left dramatic radio in 1948, "mainly because I was putting in a lot of hours working with
J. Francis McComas in creating what soon became
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. We got it off the ground in 1949 and saw it take hold solidly by 1950. This was a major creative challenge and although I was involved in a lot of other projects, I stayed with
F&SF into 1958." Throughout his years with the magazine, Boucher was involved in many other projects. He wrote fiction for the SF and mystery markets (primarily short stories). He taught an informal writing class from his home in Berkeley. He continued his Sunday mystery columns for the
New York Times Book Review, while also writing crime-fiction reviews for
The New York Herald Tribune as Holmes (he also reviewed SF and fantasy (as H. H. Holmes) for the
Herald Tribune) and functioning as chief critic for ''Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine
. He edited True Crime Detective
, supervised the Mercury Mystery Line and (later) the Dell Great Mystery Library; hosted Golden Voices'', his series of historical opera recordings for
Pacifica Radio, and served (in 1951) as president of Mystery Writers of America. As part of his reviews of mystery novels, he published a list of Best Crime Fiction of the Year from 1949 to 1967, listing from 12 to 15 titles each year. He published his list as Anthony Boucher. Boucher was a
poker player, a political activist, a sport fan (football, basketball, track, gymnastics and rugby), a Sherlockian in
The Baker Street Irregulars and a chef. He was also an expert collector of recordings of early operatic singers. ==Television==