- Physics for Scientists and Engineers by Raymond A. Serway (now w/ J.W. Jewett)
- Fundamentals of Physics by David Halliday & Robert Resnick (now with Jearl Walker)
- University Physics by H.D. Young & R.A. Freedman (formerly Sears & Zemansky)
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers Paul A. Tipler (now w/ Gene Mosca)
- Classical Mechanics
Classical Dynamics of Particles and Systems by Jerry B. Marion (now w/ S.T. Thornton) - Electricity & Magnetism
Introduction to Electrodynamics by David J. Griffiths
Electricity and Magnetism by Edward M. Purcell - Optics & Waves
Waves by Frank S. Crawford
Vibrations and Waves by Anthony P. French - Thermodynamics/Statistical Mechanics
Thermal Physics by Charles Kittel - Quantum Mechanics
Introduction to Quantum Mechanics by David J. Griffiths - Atomic Physics
Concepts of Modern Physics by Arthur Beiser
Quantum Physics of Atoms, Molecules, Solids, Nuclei, and Particles by R.M. Eisberg & R. Resnick
Elementary Atomic Structure by Gordon K. Woodgate - Special Relativity
Special Relativity by Anthony P. French
Spacetime Physics by Edwin F. Taylor & John A. Wheeler - Lab Methods
An Introduction to Error Analysis by John R. Taylor
Data Reduction and Error Analysis for the Physical Sciences by P.R. Bevington & D.K. Robinson
Techniques for Nuclear and Particle Physics Experiments by William R. Leo - Specialized Topics (Nuclear, Particle, Condensed Matter)
Concepts of Modern Physics by Arthur Beiser
Quantum Physics of Atoms, Molecules, Solids, Nuclei, and Particles by R.M. Eisberg & R. Resnick
Introduction to Elementary Particles by David J. Griffiths
Introduction to High Energy Physics by Donald H. Perkins
I would not recommend Tribble's Princeton Guide to Advanced Physics or GRE Physics by REA. They both present a list of equations and formulas with little context. This might be useful if the both books weren't full of mistakes. The REA book also contains 4 practice tests which are unrepresentative of the real test and therefore useless.
Finally there are books published by the ETS that contain actual past exams. The most recent one is available online here. The rest are available at the bottom of the Ohio State SPS GRE webpage. This website claims to have worked solutions for every question on all four exams.
UPDATE (Jan. 09, 2009)
An American Physics Student in England gives some very useful advice here.
- summary: study the positronium "atom"
section 5.14 & 4.2.1 in Perkins, 3rd & 4th ed., respectively
section 5.6 in Griffiths, 1st ed. (probably in the same place for 2nd ed.)
- summary: spend some time thinking about/practicing "strategy and test-taking techniques"