what do you want to get out of it? Just use the calculations in applications? or understand the reasoning? or actually get down into the fundamental ideas?
the classic text with both theory and applications is courant, or courant and john.
the classic book with no theory and just a smattering of rough intuitive ideas plus computations, for engineers, is Calculus made easy by Silvanus P Thompson.
The classic books for rigorous mathematician style theory are Apostol or Spivak or Kitchen. These are the books on my shelf.
I tend not to have any of the many common college cookbook calculus texts, but a good one is the original by George B. Thomas, aimed at MIT engineers, as early an edition as possible, preferably back into the 60's, it may be reprinted as the "alternate edition": or maybe the 1972 ed. would do. You might want to go to a library and check these out, as it is hard to know from the internet description.
There are some here as low as $1. which I recommend. I would not get any newer than 1972 or so.
http://www.abebooks.com/servlet/SearchResults?an=George+B+Thomas&sts=t&x=55&y=14The first edition of Edwards and Penney was excellent as well. Try one of these for $1. from about 1982:
http://www.abebooks.com/servlet/SearchResults?an=edwards,+penney&sts=t&x=65&y=9