Though not directly related to software, I can enthusiastically recommend The Creative Habit by Twyla Tharp, an American dance choreographer.

In the introduction she addresses the broad applicability of the principles in the book:
Creativity is not just for artists.
It's for businesspeople looking for a
new way to close a sale; it's for
engineers trying to solve a problem;
it's for parents who want their
children to see the world in more than
one way. Over the past four decades, I
have been engaged in one creative
pursuit or another every day, in both
my professional and my personal life.
I've thought a great deal about what
it means to be creative, and how to go
about it efficiently. I've also
learned from the painful experience of
going about it in the worst possible
way. I'll tell you about both. And
I'll give you exercises that will
challenge some of your creative
assumptions -- to make you stretch,
get stronger, last longer. After all,
you stretch before you jog, you loosen
up before you work out, you practice
before you play. It's no different for
your mind.
The author discusses many issues that directly correlate to software development. For example, here is an excerpt on sustaining creative momementum from day to day:
Exercise 28: Build a bridge to the
next day - to increase the chances of
successive successes. Hemingway’s
trick - call it a day at a point when
he knew what came next (to extend the
mini-groove.) Try to stop while you
have a few drops left in the tank, and
use that fuel to build a bridge to the
next day. Give yourself a creative
quota. Write the leftover idea on a
notebook and put it away. Start the
next day by looking at your note.
A comprehensive review can be found here.
The first chapter can be found here.