First the incomplete combustion bit is nothing to do with limiting reagents. It means that CO rather than CO2 is produced because of a shortage of oxygen.
That's a bit like saying "I'm not broke, I just ran out of money".
That's fair, my phrasing was clumsy. I should have said that it is not necessary to identify a limiting reagent for the purposes of determining the number of moles of carbon reacted.
Using the balanced equation for the heat of formation of water and the following thermonuclear equation, calculate the amount of heat released when 27.9 grams of C(s) is incompletely combusted to give CO(g).
C(s) + H2O(g) → CO(g) + H2(g) ΔH°rxn = 131.3 kj/mol
Maybe the question is badly written but I cannot see how the quoted equation could refer to a combustion reaction. Oxford dictionary has the definition of combustion as: "Rapid chemical combination of a substance with oxygen, involving the production of heat and light." Collins dictionary supplements this with: "A chemical process in which two compounds, such as sodium and chlorine, react together to produce heat and light."
In the course I teach (UK A-level), enthalpy of combustion is defined as the energy released when one mole of a substance is completely reacted with excess oxygen. The carbon does not react with oxygen in the quoted equation. Even by the Collins definition, in which they suggest that it is any reaction that gives out heat and light, I cannot see how this reaction could qualify, since it is endothermic.
Again, from the question:
Using the balanced equation for the heat of formation of water and the following thermonuclear equation, calculate the amount of heat released when 27.9 grams of C(s) is incompletely combusted to give CO(g).
Which contradicts Zyklonb's answer:
So, one mole is 12 grams and reacts using 131.3 kJ, so one gram is 131.3 ÷ 12 =10.9416667, × 27.9 =305.272501
Thus the reaction can proceed if it is given 305.3 kJ, that's the answer.
The question specifically requests the amount of heat released, but Zynlonb's answer quotes an amount of energy required for the reaction to proceed.
In spite of my clumsy phrasing, I'd still go with my solution, but please come back and tell us the answer when you find it out.