Questions regarding Fox Company

My great uncle Phil, who passed about 15 years or so back served with the 101st, 506th, Fox Company. While he almost never spoke of the war, we know he jumped on D-Day and at some point later in the war was shot in the arm. When the series came out, I was a kid at the time and asked if he had been part of Easy Company and his response was “no, I was in Fox company two hundred yards over doing the same goddamn thing, they got that tv show and we didn’t get shit” so the subject was quickly dropped. If anyone could point me towards more information about Fox company or accounts of the guys in it, I would really appreciate it

Edit: Thanks to all for the massive response. Thanks to some very helpful and knowledgeable folks, I was able to find out a lot more. My great uncle earned his wings in January 45 and came in as a replacement and remained in Europe until 1946. When this conversation took place, I assumed he had jumped because the show had just came out and I was 12. I just assumed he had been at D-Day, as I had just watched the show, and suddenly to me, my quiet and humble great uncle was instantly a larger than life hero. And he never thought himself one, but he was and always will be to me. The units and men who were there were all heroes, and thanks to this book/series/sub, I know a lot more about my family history. I also know the men of Fox and Dog companies were equally heroic, and didn’t run from the fight at Bloody Gulch, but performed an orderly fallback to the next hedgerow when armor came into play, which as a Marine vet myself honestly makes perfect sense. Thanks to all for the massive response, and I don’t think I’ll ever watch the show the same way again. May those who fell in battle rest easy, and RIP Uncle Phil 1925-2014 a true American Hero