The TCP/IP Guide, by Charles M. Kozierok
Although it is described as an 'encyclopedic reference', it is incredibly readable as a narrative.
This author provides a very , very, very well written, comprehensive, introduction to networking and the infrastructure that underlies the web. Something all programmers ought to know.
For me it is the natural follow-on from Charles Petzold's 'Code'. If "Code" explains to the layman how computers work, 'The TCP/IP Guide' explains how they connect together.
If you gave a 12 year old geek a copy 'Code' and a copy of 'The TCP/IP Guide' - they'd be building the next Google by the age of 17.
In other words, if I could go back in time and tell myself to read a specific book at the beginning of my career as a developer, this (plus Code) is up there in the top of my list.