I'm really surprised that nobody has mentioned Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment by W. Richard Stevens. It's not necessarily the book that had the most impact on me, but it definitely deserves a place among many of the other greats mentioned here.
Even though I mostly did (and do) Perl programming, reading this book really helped me understand more about what's going on under the hood. It covers a ton of really critical low-level concepts like File IO, system files (passwd, group, etc), process control, signals, and so on.
Having some idea of how this stuff works at the C level is very useful, even if you never write any C code, because every language you use (on a Unix system) is using these APIs under the hood.