[Matthew Porter is] the undisputed king of the hipster board book genre.
School Library Journal
Against wood-grained backgrounds of yellow, blue and green, stylized animals chase one another's tails from page to page. The fun in 'Tails Chasing Tails' is in identifying what's being pursued from just its hindquarters; when you turn the page, the face and front legs of the creature appear. The exception is the elephant (usually everyone's favorite) that begins and ends the book. The animals' uniformly almond-shaped eyes and Matthew Porter's milky, opaque colors give the simple pictures an Indian inflection.
The New York Times
Everyone loves a good chase, and Porter uses one to let readers guess the identity of each animal in the chain based on their tail. The first animal, an elephant with green almond-shaped eyes and a swoopy trunk, is pursuing 'a black-and-orange-striped tail.' The tiger to whom that tail belongs, meanwhile, is running after a 'short, brown tail' on the subsequent spread. The texture of the pinewood on which Porter paints bleeds through the images, and his animals-while entirely friendly and appealing-also have a static, almost totemic quality, as though the chase were part of a larger folktale.
Publishers Weekly
Porter's acrylic paintings on wood of wide-eyed animals have a delightful folk-art look and feel and offer readers strong visual clues as to who is being chased. The text follows a simple pattern, but it includes some great vocabulary-building descriptions of each tail for would-be guessers... A delightful and playful romp worthy of an enthusiastic following.
Kirkus Reviews
Aspiring authors can all learn a thing or two from Matthew Porter. He's produced an armful of beloved toddler books, including ABC and Count the Birdies.
Red Tricycle Seattle
We love Porter's hip, bright board books... Porter's art is filled with wide-eyed animals that he paints on wood panels. He is a north Seattle dad, and gets what toddlers and their parents want to read.
Seattle's Child