<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Art_of_Computer_Programming">The Art of Computer Programming</a>, by Donald Knuth.

Let me preface by saying Donald Knuth is awesome, and anyone who could read and comprehend The Art of Programming would be a better computer programmer for having done so.  However, between the amount/complexity of mathematics, and the amount of assembly language, the vast majority of programmers will *not* work through the exercises.  Without working through the exercises, the value gained from 'reading' the book is dramatically lessened.  The book is seriously dense, it is not a light read, and anyone who buys it without that understanding will end up with the book sitting on their bookshelf unread.

IMO it's better to buy a book you'll get value out of, than one that you *could* get value out of, but don't.

PS: I have a bachelor's degree in Mathematics and a master's in Computer Science.  I've 'read' my 3-volume set of "The Art of Programming" once, with about the amount of dedication and time devoted to it that I'd spend with a similarly sized novel.  I'd be lucky if 10% of the material really "sunk in".  I'd like to be able to give the books the attention they deserve, but that probably won't happen any time soon.