There will probably be a few different responses, but my two cents is as follows:
Yes, you can reheat and glue up in stages. I glue up my risers first, and then the whole bow. Some people say that any future glue-ups need to be at a lower temperature than the first, but I have not seen where that is promoted by the manufacturer. Many epoxies break down at high temperatures, but those temps are usually well above their recommended max cure temperatures.
I've seen several people with convincing arguments and data that says that EA40 achieves the same strength regardless of cure temperature. It can just take a long time at low temperatures. I've also seen people swear that you need to heat cure to get full strength. I kinda believe the first group but heat mine for convenience and for the effect the heat has on the wood. (Press a stack of laminations and cook at 180 degrees for four hours without glue and you'll note that they have taken on much of the shape of the form. No heat means the residual stresses are still in your laminations.)
-Dave