One of the consultants who taught at my University said that the Mythical Man Month and Peopleware were good. I've read these too and can also recommended them (although they are more about managing programmers rather than programming per se). The consultant also recommended Design Patterns (although he said not to read the book cover to cover but rather to just be aware of them so you could refer to them later).
Your list seems to cover the popular books (Score:2)
But programming book lists crop up all over the place. In this Stifflog interview with Yegge, Torvalds, Hansson, Norvig, Thomas, Van Rossum, Gosling, Stroustrup and Bray [stifflog.com] the interviewees mention their favourite books (of the most popular I think only K&R and Programming Pearls weren't on your list).
Many people have Knuth's Art of Programming on their shelves (but it's harder to find people who have read all of it).
One of the Kernel Hacker Bookshelf series on LWN recommends Unix Internals [lwn.net].
One of the consultants who taught at my University said that the Mythical Man Month and Peopleware were good. I've read these too and can also recommended them (although they are more about managing programmers rather than programming per se). The consultant also recommended Design Patterns (although he said not to read the book cover to cover but rather to just be aware of them so you could refer to them later).
Reddit has a Must Read Programming books thread [reddit.com].
I've heard the "Dragon Book" (Compilers: Principles, Techniques, and Tools I think is the 2nd edition) being talked of favourably.
What is the single most influential book every programmer should read? thread on Stackoverflow [stackoverflow.com].
Many people seem to recommend reading Godel, Escher, Bach...
Joel Spoolsky's list of books every programmer should read [joelonsoftware.com].
Maybe someone will collect the 20 most popular books into one easy to read post rather than the scattershot of links I've given you here...