Tom,
there certainly are strategic choices on those holes when you stand on the tee and decide what club to hit and where. It's esp. the case on 13, but also evident at 2 and 15 as you think about where to and how to turn over the tee shot.
You don't have your interesting mid-fairway bunkers to deal weith on seocnd shots, but given the angle of the water and the slope of the greens on 13 and 15, you also face a choice of how far back to lay up and what to leave yourself for a third shot - that is for the vast majority of us real golfers for whom reaching par-5s in two is exceptional rather than the rule.
I also think the 8th green with its elephantine mounds is vastly under-rated. Very tough to hold from the left side, much easier to hold coming in from the right.
On many of the par-4s, the recovery option has been removed from the sides of fairways, but even for mid-handicappers, the par-5s remain great.