Looking quickly through your other recent reviews, you seem to be making the correct decision most of the time on obvious cases, so I assume that you have read our guidelines and are attempting to review conscientiously and in good faith. That's good.
However, I notice the audit you mentioned failing was a question tagged the c, yet your profile suggests your primary areas of expertise are javascript, html, css, and possibly iphone/ios. At least, these are the tags for which your contributions have been most well-received. That implies that, either, these are the technologies you know best or, at a minimum, these are the "sections" of Stack Overflow where you are most well-acquainted with the quality standards.
Therefore, my suggestion to you would be to filter the items that you review by tag. There is a built-in (automated) way of doing this, just click on the "filter" link at the top of the review page and fill in up to three tags:

Alternatively, just hit the Skip button when you see something written in a language/technology that you are not comfortable with.
You say that you felt this question "wasn't described as well as it could have been," that it "seemed to lack detail." I agree that the question wasn't described as well as it could have been, but that's kind of an unfair standard to hold someone to! The thing you want to look for in the review queues, and especially in the "First Posts" queue, is whether a question meets a minimum acceptability threshold. Lots of the things in this queue are going to be unsalvageable crap; those are easy to dispatch. The rest are going to either need some work or be okay. Although this question may not have been perfect, it was on-topic, and it did contain enough information for someone who understands C to answer it easily, which makes it acceptable. Granted, if you don't know anything about C, it might have looked impossible. Or if you know a lot about C, it might have looked too trivial. The first is dealt with by not reviewing questions on topics you don't understand; the second is dealt with by keeping in mind the purpose of the review queues.
To reiterate—there's no shame in hitting the Skip button when you are unsure!