if you have acces to ipe, osage or bulletwood, those woods make great bows when backed with boo, and you can make them quite short/narrow.
I'd advice a english longbow type, 72"ntn, 1" wide (when using these hardwoods) or 1 1/2" when using whitewoods like red oak, ash, elm etc. taper them from midlimb to 1/2" nocks. narrow outerlimbs add quite some cast and give a smoother release. most reliable and easy bows to make. and ofcourse hard to beat in beauty.
it's good to get that boo dry, it can take it very well, but don't overdry it. those boards are probably already dry. keeping the thin boo laminations in a warm place in your house will be more than enough. I'd not temper the boo for the back, but you might think about putting some boo belly lams on the bow if it gets in underweight, in that case, tempering is a good choice. Don't forget you can't tiller a boo back, the taper must be perfectly, just as the bow's tiller.
you can put some reflex in them when glueing your boo slats on them, 2" will do. remember 1" of set ain't a problem at all.
10" for a riser is quite long, you may think about shortening it by 2". but as I said, it won't be a bad choice to make some handle-bending bows first. Risers and other 'cosmetics' will come, later.
Nick